Literature DB >> 31535602

Further Data on Wound Healing Rates After Application of Lucilia sericata.

Zbigniew Szczepanowski1, Andrzej Tukiendorf2, Grzegorz Krasowski3.   

Abstract

Maggot therapy has recently received a special medical and public attention, and according to the specialists' opinion, it takes us to the future of a wound care. Simultaneously, as new biomechanisms were discovered, statistical analyses of wound healing rates were conducted usually adopting simple parametric and nonparametric tests. In this study, based on a set of statistical methods, we performed an advanced analysis of wound surface reduction using Lucilia sericata larvae in different clinical aspects: status of diabetes mellitus, maggots' density, and pain intensity. Particularly, we employed these factors because, in our statistical analysis, they are easy to obtain and they proved to be the possible risk factors of wound regeneration. Furthermore, these factors represent different clinical, biological, and neurological spectra of knowledge. In our study, we have found further and statistically significant correlations between the analyzed variables and skin regeneration together with different time periods of the healing rate using maggot therapy in patients with lower limb ulceration.

Entities:  

Keywords:  diabetes mellitus; maggot therapy; pain intensity; wound healing

Year:  2019        PMID: 31535602     DOI: 10.1177/1534734619876840

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Low Extrem Wounds        ISSN: 1534-7346            Impact factor:   2.057


  1 in total

1.  Microbiological effects in patients with leg ulcers and diabetic foot treated with Lucilia sericata larvae.

Authors:  Zbigniew Szczepanowski; Beniamin O Grabarek; Dariusz Boroń; Andrzej Tukiendorf; Iwona Kulik-Parobczy; Leszek Miszczyk
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2021-05-04       Impact factor: 3.315

  1 in total

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