| Literature DB >> 32664147 |
Dong Xing1, Zhaoxu Yang, Can Cao, Zhijie Dong, Jingchao Wei, Xuehong Zheng, Wenyi Li.
Abstract
Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is an important therapy for the management of refractory wounds. The aim of this retrospective preliminary study was to introduce a modified NPWT (m-NPWT) and compared the efficacy of it with conventional NPWT (c-NPWT) in the management of refractory wounds.A total of 127 patients with refractory wounds receiving the NPWT from January 2010 to October 2017 in our hospital were retrospectively reviewed. The demographics and clinical data were collected from medical records and compared between m-NPWT group and c-NPWT group.There were 65 patients in c-NPWT group and 62 patients in m-NPWT group. No significant difference was observed between 2 groups in antimicrobial use (P = .51), hospitalization time (P = .24), wound-healing rate (P = .44) or complication rate (P = .59). However, patients in m-NPWT group had shorter wound-healing time (24.82 vs 27.66 days, P < .01), less debridement times (1.23 vs 2.08, P < .01), less total cost (3743.93 vs 6344.33 yuan, P < .01) and higher satisfaction rate (56/62 vs 44/65, P = .02) compared to those in c-NPWT group.The m-NPWT technique was an efficient and safe alternative therapy for refractory wounds.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32664147 PMCID: PMC7360312 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000021148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Figure 1A 67-year-old female patient had a pressure sore around the left hip receiving c-NPWT. A, the pressure sore around the left hip; B, the debridement to remove the necrotic tissue; C, the implantation of the solid foam with a drainage tube; D, sealing the wound with a semipermeable membrane; E, checking the leakproofness and connecting the negative-pressure device; F, the healed wound.
Figure 2A 65-year-old female patient had a pressure sore on the left haunch receiving m-NPWT. A, the pressure sore on the left haunch; B, the debridement to remove the necrotic tissue and the implantation of the internal drainage tube; C, suturing the wound; D, the medical gauze and the external drainage tube outside the wound; E, forming the sealed environment with a semipermeable membrane and connecting the negative pressure provided by the hospital; F, the healed wound.
Demographics of included patients.
Comparison of demographics between 2 groups.
Comparison of clinical outcomes between 2 groups.