• Military medicine · Jan 2021

    A Novel Approach to Negative Pressure Wound Therapy: Use of High Suction Capillary Device to Improve Wound Healing.

    • Ranjit Chatterjee, Tara M Riddle, Melisa K Poskarbiewicz, and George F Babcock.
    • Dristi LLC, Cincinnati, OH 45243, USA.
    • Mil Med. 2021 Jan 25; 186 (Suppl 1): 364-369.

    IntroductionNegative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) is a procedure used for nonhealing wounds. In NPWT, a special sealed dressing of large cell foam (>400 µm) or gauze is connected to a pump. Most commonly, negative pressures between -10 and -125 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg) are used. The mechanism of healing is unknown but maybe attributable to removal of the exudate and bacteria, and the stimulation of tissue repair through microdeformation. Reticulated foams with micron-size open cells, Capillary Suction Devices (CSD; 100 to 5 µm) exert capillary suction between 10 and 70 mm of Hg with a multilayered foam dressing.Materials And MethodsYorkshire pigs received 5 surgical excision wounds, 3 cm2, on each side of the back. The wounds were covered with a NPWT dressing (110 mm Hg negative pressure by a pump), CSD with capillary suctions of 30 mm Hg (CSD-30) and 70 mm Hg (CSD-70), and a conventional gauze dressing. The wounds were measured on day 2, and then every 4-5 days thereafter; the total fluid collected by the various dressing over time.ResultsBy post-wound day 20, the wounds treated with CSD-70 and NPWT were 100% closed while the wounds treated with CSD-30 and gauze were 65% and 45%, respectively. This indicated comparable wound closure efficacies for CSD-70 and NPWT. The average total fluid uptake measured in grams dry weight were similar for CSD-70 and NPWT, 36 and 38 g, respectively, while the values were 24 g for CSD-30 and 12 g for gauze. However, the maximum fluid uptake observed at day 2 indicated that CSD-70 and CSD 30, 24 and 14 g, respectively, were superior to NPWT and gauze 12 and 7 g, respectively.ConclusionThis data indicate comparable wound closure efficacies for CSD-70 and NPWT. It is felt that CSD is an effective, safe, and lower cost alternative to vacuum-assisted NPWT.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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