| Literature DB >> 33914741 |
Suma Krishnasastry1, Charles D Mackenzie2.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33914741 PMCID: PMC8084153 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Medical interventions additional to the WHO Minimal Care Package for filarial lymphoedema.
| INTERVENTION | ISSUES | COMMENT |
|---|---|---|
| Anti-infection enhanced washing | Testing and availability | New anti-infective agents, often with healing promotion characteristics are available for testing |
| Antifilarial therapy with the MDA agents | Not to be used during acute filarial attacks | May require modification of donated MDA drugs in post-MDA periods where there are still LE patients remaining |
| Antibiotic treatment | Availability | Doxycycline trials are under way [ |
| Skin emollients | Local agents important—oils | Keeping natural skin moisture through simple oils, etc. is important in maintaining skin protection |
| Massage | Special methodology essential | Requires training, time consuming but north less useful when used |
| Wound care | Important | The availability of antibiotic creams etc. is an issue; new anti-infective and healing agents may help (e.g., HCLO |
| Improved assessment of dermal and tissue changes | The need to improve assessment of patients | It is important to investigate new approaches to assessment of the dermal tissue and vascular status (e.g., indurometry [ |
| Reconstructive surgery | Not generally recommended | Field experience indicates a very poor outcome for these cases |
| Rehabilitation | An important component | It is important to consider not just the patient’s clinical condition but also their lives as a whole |
| Family care | Important and often ignored | An LE patient in family affects the family as a whole |
| Mental health | Important | An important recent addition to the understanding of LF patients and their care [ |
*MDA agents as used in the particular endemic area—ivermectin and albendazole in onchocerciasis-endemic regions; diethylcarbamazine and albendazole in other LF endemic areas (with the addition of ivermectin in certain areas).
**HCLO (hypochlorous acid has properties of microbial sterilisation and improving healing [20].
HCLO, hypochlorous acid; LE, lymphoedema; LF, lymphatic filariasis; MDA, mass drug administration.
Fig 1A 60-year-old female who underwent surgery to debulk the lymphoedematous tissue on her right leg 4 years previously; extensive postsurgery scarring, nodule formation, and dermal cicatrisation are evident.