Plasma Activated Saline in Wound Treatment
WoundWound Infection1 moreThis is a prospective, open-label, randomized, parallel controlled clinical trial. The purpose of this study is to understand the application value of plasma-activated normal saline in the treatment of different types of wounds. The main questions it aims to answer are: What is the effect of plasma activated normal saline in promoting wound healing of different types? What is the safety of plasma activated normal saline in the treatment of wound surface? Subjects will be randomly divided into the intervention group and the control group. The intervention group will receive wound treatment with plasma activated normal saline, and the control group will receive routine dressing change treatment.
PINTA - Prophylactic Incisional Negative Pressure Therapy for Major Amputations
Wound SurgicalWound Infection1 morePost-operative wound issues in abdominal surgery have a significant impact on patient outcomes. This study is taking place to investigate if Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) dressings reduces Surgical Site Infections, post surgical complications and improves scar appearance compared to standard dressings.
Serum Procalcitonin and Post-cesarean Wound Infection
Cesarean Wound Disruptionserum procalcitonin levels are important during infections and sepsis.The aim of this study is to evaluate the correlation between serum procalcitonin and severity of post cesarean wound infection
Evaluation of the Quality of Life Induced by the Cinnamon Anti-odor Dressing in Patients With Malodorous...
Malodorous Wounds (ChronicMalignant or Infected Wounds)Wounds can smell bad when they are necrotic, infected, malignant or complicated by fistulas or abscesses. The discomfort and evocations (perception) associated with these smells can be different from person to person. Foul odors are often associated with a repulsive effect. Malodorous wounds can have negative social and psychological repercussions (shame, depreciation, isolation). Malodor is due to the presence of bacteria, whether the wound is colonized or infected. Bacteria release Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) that emit these odors. There are a multitude of anti-odor treatments (conventional or not) that highlight the difficulty of effectively treating this symptom. Charcoal dressings are recommended. Charcoal does not treat the etiology, it is not odorous, but it has the ability to adsorb VOCs. To treat odor, the most prescribed antibiotic is Metronidazole, because its action targets anaerobic bacteria whose presence increases odor. But repeated prescriptions of antibiotics increase the risk of selection pressure, in addition to possible side effects. It's not efficient in all the situations Another strategy is the application of local antimicrobials. But it is effective only if the bacteria responsible for the odors are on the surface of the wound, which is not the case if it is a tumor mass, thick necrosis or abscesses. These local or general treatments do not completely control bad odors in all situations. A new dressing combining adsorption capabilities (reduction of bad odors) with odor release (modification of the perception of residual odors) with cinnamon (CINESTEAM®) is now available. This work aims to evaluate this new medical device compared to the reference dressing (charcoal) on quality of life, as well as criteria still poorly documented such as discomfort and appetite. The primary endpoint is the percentage of patients with a reduction of at least 0.4 points in the overall score on the Wound-Qol questionnaire (Quality of life). It is estimated that a 0.4 point reduction in the overall score is a clinically relevant reduction for patients and reflects an improvement in their quality of life. An improvement of 0.4 points is expected in 25% of patients in the control arm (charcoal dressing) and in 55% of patients in the experimental arm (cinnamon dressing). The study provides for the inclusion of 98 people with malodorous wounds in 3 hospital located on Ile de France. Day 0: General data on the wound and current treatments will collected, Wound-Qol scale, lifestyle, discomfort related to smell, evaluation of appetite. The evaluated dressings will positioned on the top of primary dressing. They will fix by a non-occlusive or semi-occlusive fixation. The entire dressing will changed 1 time a day for 14 days. Day 1: The patient will assess the discomfort related to the smell before changing the dressing. Day 3: Assessment of the employability of the dressing by the caregiver. Day 7 and 14: Assessment of the discomfort related to the smell by the patient, the caregiver and the entourage. Appetite will assessed with the SEFI® scale. Day 14 only: Wound-Qol scale and self-questionnaire on the appearance of any discomfort(s)/reaction(s) due to the dressing.
PO vs IV Antibiotics for the Treatment of Infected Nonunion of Fractures After Fixation
InfectionsInfected Wound8 moreThis is a Phase III clinical randomized control trial to investigate differences between patient with an infected nonunion treated by PO vs. IV antibiotics. The study population will be 250 patients, 18 years or older, being treated for infected nonunion after internal fixation of a fracture with a segmental defect less than one centimeter. Patients will be randomly assigned to either the treatment (group 1) PO antibiotics for 6 weeks or the control group (group 2) IV antibiotics for 6 weeks. The primary hypothesis is that the effectiveness of oral antibiotic therapy is equivalent to traditional intravenous antibiotic therapy for the treatment of infected nonunion after fracture internal fixation, when such therapy is combined with appropriate surgical management. Clinical effectiveness will be measured as the primary outcome as the number of secondary re-admissions related to injury and secondary outcomes of treatment failure (re-infection, nonunion, antibiotic complications) within the first one year of follow-up, as defined by specified criteria and determined by a blinded data assessment panel. In addition, treatment compliance, the cost of treatment, the number of surgeries required, the type and incidence of complications, and the duration of hospitalization will be measured.
Redscar © Application for Detection of Infected Surgical Wounds
Surgical Wound InfectionSurgical Wound1 moreSurgical site infection (SSI) is the second cause of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). Its appearance increase mobidity and post-operatice hospital stays, increasing costs aswell, although its one of the most preventable HAI. The diagnosis and detection of SSI is usually carried out late by non-especialists once the patient has consulted to the emergency services or primary care with an already obvious infections. This raise both the direct and indirect costs and saturaties the emergency department and primary care, while delays treatment and increase disconfort and morbidity. A smart phone aplication (RedScar© ) was developped in order to detect and monitor wound infection remotely based on an automated algorithm with no medical intervention.This app allows the patient to upload a photography and answer a short questionary, the aplication will then give a diagnosis of possible infection and recommendations. This study is the first one to use a smartphone-based automatic aplication on real patients to diagnosis wound infection . This is a prospective, single-institution not randomized quasy-experimental study protocol. The study design and protocol were reviewed and approved by Research Ethics Committee of the Balearic Islands (CEI-IB). This paper is part of the R+D+i Project PID2020-113870GB-I00- "Desarrollo de herramientas de Soft Computing para la Ayuda al Diagnóstico Clínico y a la Gestión de Emergencias (HESOCODICE)", funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/.
Efficacy of Diluted Betadine vs Antibiotic Installation Before Surgical Wound Closure in Prevention...
Surgical Wound InfectionInfection control and health-care-associated infections and Safety of medical service providers Evidence based management of common medical and surgical problems
The Use of Steri3X for Prevention of Post-operative Wound Infections in Cesarean Sections
Surgical Site InfectionCesarean Section; Complications3 morePostpartum infection if a major cause of maternal morbidity and mortality and surgical site infections are some of the common complications following cesarean section. This study aims to determine the effect of Steri3X on the incidence of cesarean section SSI at Regional One Hospital.
Optimizing Closed Incision Negative Pressure Wound Therapy in Emergency Laparotomy
Surgical Site InfectionSurgical Wound6 moreThe purpose of this study is to find differences in rates of surgical site infections following emergency laparotomy with the use of two different incisional negative pressure wound therapy (iNPWT)devices.
Early Versus Delayed Bathing of Orthopaedic Surgical Wounds
Surgical WoundPost Operative Wound InfectionThis is a single center randomized control trial assessing the effect of early versus delayed bathing on orthopaedic surgical wounds in patients undergoing surgical treatment of fractures. Patients will be recruited by screening all patients undergoing surgical treatment for fractures at our institution. Patients who provide written consent will be randomized to one of two treatment arms after confirming eligibility criteria. Group A will be advised to begin early normal bathing (non-submerged showering) with uncovered surgical wounds. Group B will be advised to follow traditional delayed bathing with covered wounds.