| Literature DB >> 27827278 |
Abstract
Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) has shown great advantages in the management of a wide range of clinical problems such as wound or chronic wound healing; open wounds with exposed bone, nerve, or tendon; and orthopaedic implants and related infection in the orthopaedics field. Even though it has shown positive efficacy in treating infection (wound infection or orthopaedic implant infection), its molecular mechanisms of action remain unclear and require further exploration. Since NPWT is widely used in the clinical setting, a comprehensive understanding of its biological effect will assist in appropriate clinical application. This review summarises the biological effect of NPWT on bacteria and cell growth as well as the possible mechanisms associated with NPWT applied in wound healing. We also highlight novel antibacterial dressings for NPWT. PubMed, and Web of Science database searches were conducted. Several search terms were used including negative pressure wound therapy, bacterial growth, growth factor, wound healing, dressing. All databases were searched from inception to 2015, references that lacked original resarch were eliminated.Entities:
Keywords: bacterial growth; clinical application; growth factor; negative pressure wound therapy; novel dressing
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27827278 DOI: 10.12968/jowc.2016.25.11.617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Wound Care ISSN: 0969-0700 Impact factor: 2.072