| Literature DB >> 28070472 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mankind has always suffered wounds throughout time due to trauma, disease, and lifestyles. Many wounds are non-healing and have continued to be challenging. However, utilizing advanced wound care treatments, such as negative pressure wound treatment with instillation and dwell time (NPWTi-d), has proven beneficial. NPWTi-d is indicated in a variety of wounds, such as trauma, surgical, acute, pressure injuries, diabetic foot ulcers, and venous leg ulcers. Bacteria and bioburden interrupts wound healing by increasing the metabolic needs, ingesting, and robbing the necessary nutrients and oxygen. Instillation therapy is the technique of intermittently washing out a wound with a liquid solution. The mechanism of action is instilling fluid into the wound bed, soaking for a determined time, loosening and cleaning of exudate, contaminants, and/or infection, removing fluid via negative pressure, thus promoting tissue growth. CASE STUDY: The patient was diagnosed with a large lymphedema mass on the right upper thigh. Surgical removal of the lymphedema mass was indicated due to interference with quality of life. After a failed flap and surgical debridement, NPWTi-d with normal saline was implemented.Entities:
Keywords: bioburden; chronic lymphedema; dwell times; instillation; necrotic; negative pressure wound therapy; nutrition; surgery; therapy; veraflo
Year: 2016 PMID: 28070472 PMCID: PMC5208581 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.903
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Mechanism of Action of Negative Wound Therapy
| Decreases third space edema, allowing room for oxygen and nutrients to be delivered into the area which supplies to needed tissues. |
| Reduces wound exudate, thus decreasing the food source for bacteria. |
| Diminishes excessive inflammatory agents, which develop in wound stalls during the second state of healing, the inflammatory state. Inflammatory agents are known as matrix metalloproteases (MMPs), which decrease healing. |
| Promotes tissue stretching and contracting, known as macro and microstrain. This stimulates the release of essential growth factors to stimulate fibroblasts, increasing the construction of extracellular matrix (tissue structure/scaffolding), resulting in tissue granulation formation (pink or red, often beefy color, with small buds of tissue growth forming in the wound bed having an increased vascular supply and wound closure) [ |
| Stimulates angiogenesis (blood vessel formation) [ |
| Covers the wound, protecting the environment while maintaining a moist wound bed, essential for healing. |
Tips for Negative Pressure Wound Vac Application and Proper Seal Management
The following tips are based on the author's research and clinical experience [4, 10-12].
| May use an adhesive removal pad to remove dressings, remove all adhesive residue. Be sure the adhesive pad is used onto the adhesive dressing, which is attached to the peri-wound skin. Pull or stretch the drape outward; this makes for easier removal. |
| Cleanse the peri-wound area; dry well. Avoid emollients, lotions, or products with fragrance, which can cause the drape not to seal. |
| May shave or clip hair, if problematic, for the drape sealing or staying sealed. |
| Premedicate for pain, if needed. The patient may assist with the dressing removal if potentially is easier on the patient. |
| Use Mepitel® One over bone, muscle, or tendon to protect. |
| Use the barrier film pad that is in each dressing kit for optimal drape adherence to the peri-wound skin. |
| For denuded peri-wounds from moisture problems, you may use the crusting technique to heal and protect the area, which is: |
| Start with clean dry skin. |
| Lightly apply ostomy powder onto the affected area, brush off excess (microscopically, the powder will sink down into the crevices). The area will look like all the powder is brushed off, but enough will still be present. |
| Light press non-sting barrier film (pad or spray) onto all the areas of skin breakdown with the ostomy powder to seal. |
| Repeat the process three times for moderate breakdown; may repeat five times for severe breakdown. It is important to brush all excess powder off and then seal with. LET DRY! |
| Perform the window pane technique to protect the peri-wound area. Apply a hydrocolloid or silicone-based barrier film around the wound perimeter, with good skin covered next to the wound margins. |
| May use stoma paste or moldable paste strips/putty in uneven areas to fill contours and help assist with moist areas. |
| For continued maceration or drainage from denuded skin, may consider painting the area with betadine. Check for allergies to betadine and shellfish. |
| Smooth folds and loose skin. For areas over joints, flex the joint area so when the joint area is moved, the dressing is placed in a stretched position to meet the moving and stretching needs to ensure adherence. |
| Use the barrier film pad over all of the margins/edges of the drape after applied to enough sealing the edges. |
| The VeraFlo™ therapy has an option for “fill-assist” or amount may be set by the programmer. Be sure the amount of fluid to be instilled saturates the black foam during each instillation cycle. The foam should rise somewhat during saturation and appear darker in color when saturated. If over-saturation occurs, the foam appears bulging and fluid is pooling around the edges of the wound or may leak out of the dressing. If this occurs, then lower the volume instilled and reseal the drape. |
| 125 mm/hg is the suggested setting, except over bone, muscle, and tendon. May use lower setting until granulation tissue forms. |
| If the area of the wound vac application is on an upper or lower extremity, secure the wound vac dressing with Kerlix™ and Ace™ wrap [ |
| Multiple dressing changes due to losing an airtight seal are time-consuming and costly. The adhesive drape for covering and sealing the foam dressing has moisture-resistant properties, which make the dressing adhere in moisture-ridden areas that are prone to increased perspiration and incontinence and where failure could be due to moisture [ |
| A hydrocolloid was used to window frame the area for additional protection of the peri-wound area. VeraFlo™ dressing was inserted into the wound bed and into partial undermining areas. The VeraFlo™ dressing consists of a hydrophobic black foam designed for a more even distribution of instilled fluid [ |
| A moisture-resistant drape was applied to cover the wound for an airtight seal. The barrier film pad was applied along all the edges/margins of the applied drape and overlapping areas to seal micro leaks. The VeraFlo™ therapy settings were programmed to automatically deliver 66 cc’s of normal saline, with a dwell time of 18 minutes and the repeat cycle of 2.5 hours, with 125 mm/hg with continuous pressure. Adequate wound cleansing is crucial in the management of wound healing. Instituting the usage of fluid, such as saline, into the wound bed impedes cellular debris, dead tissue, elevated inflammatory markers, infection, and enzymatic constituents [ |
Figure 1Failed Flap, Non-Healing Surgical Wound
The figure shows the wound at the initial wound care clinic visit, after excision of right upper thigh lymphedema mass and failed surgical flap. Necrotic tissue and hematomas are noted. The area was painful for the patient upon arrival to the outpatient wound care center.
Figure 2Surgical Debridement Continues on the Right Upper Thigh Wound
A large undermining area was present, which also contributed to the wound's non-healing status. Necrotic and hematomas were noted deeper in the unhealthy tissue, which was removed and debrided by the surgeon.
Figure 3Completed Surgical Debridement of Right Upper Thigh Wound
The surgical debridement was complete, presenting a cleaner wound bed. Part of the debridement was full-thickness, extending into the subcutaneous area. Superficial debridement was also performed to remove non-viable tissue. The hospital's Wound Care advanced practice registered nurse (APRN), was present in surgery and applied the VeraFlo™ instillation and dwell time negative pressure wound vac. Settings were: 18 minutes soak and dwell time of normal saline, every 2.5 hours with 125 mm/hg of constant pressure.
Figure 4Right Upper Thigh Wound Three Weeks Postop
The patient returned to the outpatient wound care clinic for his initial follow-up after surgical debridement, discharged from the hospital and the long-term acute care facility. The VeraFlo™ therapy consisted of almost three weeks of treatment, which continued cleaning and stimulating the wound. Red, beefy healthy granulation tissue formed, filling in the deep areas with healthy tissue. A regular wound vac was placed.
Figure 5Right Upper Thigh Wound - One Month, Three Weeks Into Healing
One month and three weeks after surgical debridement the wound is healing and healthy. Measurements are 10.5 cm length x 22.5 cm width x 1.8 cm depth. Granulation and epithelization tissue continues to form with no complications.
Figure 6Right Upper Thigh Wound - Two Months and One Week Into Healing
Last picture of the wound to date, two months and one week after original surgical debridement. Measurements are 7.5 cm length x 20.5 cm width x 0.1 cm depth. Continued granulation and epithelization tissue with the continuation of negative pressure therapy.
Compatible Solutions With VeraFlo™ Instillation VAC Therapy
The following solutions are recommended by KCI, the VeraFlo™ manufacturer [12].
| Normal Saline |
| Hypochlorite-based solution (hypochlorous acid, sodium hypochlorite, or ¼ strength Dakin’s solution (label container "for wound vac use only") |
| Lactated Ringer’s solution |
| Silver nitrate (0.5%) |
| Biguanides (polyhexanide, such as Prontosan® and Lavasept®) |
| Sulfur-based solutions (mafenide acetate/ Sulfamylon®) |
| Cationic solutions (octenidine and benzalkonium chloride, such as Octenilin® and Zephiran®) [ |