LINK Scientific Content – Clinical Case Publication

Longitudinal Evaluation of Biomarkers in Wound Fluids from Venous Leg Ulcers and Splitthickness Skin Graft Donor Site Wounds Treated with a Protease modulating Wound Dressing

Scientific Content

Longitudinal Evaluation of Biomarkers in Wound Fluids from Venous Leg Ulcers and Splitthickness Skin Graft Donor Site Wounds Treated with a Protease modulating Wound Dressing

Type
Clinical Case Publication
Topics
Acute Wounds, Chronic Wounds, Clinical Effectiveness, Complex Wounds, Exudate Management, Growth Factor Boosting, Hard-to-heal Wounds, Leg Ulcer, MMP, Proteases, Skin Grafting, Superabsorbent Polymer Dressings, Wound Pathophysiology, Wound Progression, Wound Balance, Biomarkers, Venous Leg Ulcers
Language
EN
Publication Year
2022
Author(s)
MIKOSIŃSKI J et al
published in
Advances in Dermatology and Venereology
Approx. reading time
20 min (10 pages)

Summary

Venous leg ulcers represent a clinical challenge and can impair the quality of life of patients. This study examines impaired wound healing in venous leg ulcers at the molecular level.
Protein expression patterns for biomarkers were analysed in venous leg ulcer wound fluid from 57 patients treated with a protease-modulating polyacrylate wound dressing over 12 weeks and compared this with exudate from 10 acute split-thickness wounds.
Wound healing improved in the venous leg ulcer wounds: 61.4% of the 57 patients with venous leg ulcer achieved a relative wound area reduction of ≥ 40%, and 50.9% of the total 57 patients achieved a relative wound area reduction of ≥ 60%. Within the first 14 days.
Overall, significant biomarker changes occurred in the first 14 days before a clinically robust healing response in the venous leg ulcer cohort.

Authors

Jacek MIKOSIŃSKI et al.
MIKOMED”, Clinic for Peripheral Vascular Diseases, Łódź, Poland

Citation Reference

Mikosinski. J; et al (2022) Longitudinal Evaluation of Biomarkers in Wound Fluids from Venous Leg Ulcers and Splitthickness Skin Graft Donor Site Wounds Treated with a Proteasemodulating Wound Dressing. Advances in Dermatology and Venereology. Vol 102

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