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BEVA primary care clinical guidelines: Wound management in the horse
Author(s) -
Freeman Sarah L.,
Ashton Neal M.,
Elce Yvonne A.,
Hammond Anna,
Hollis Anna R.,
Quinn Greg
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
equine veterinary journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.82
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 2042-3306
pISSN - 0425-1644
DOI - 10.1111/evj.13289
Subject(s) - medicine , silver sulfadiazine , debridement (dental) , wound healing , saline , wound closure , surgery , wound care , necrotic tissue , anesthesia
Background There are currently no evidence summaries on wounds in the horse. Objectives To develop evidence‐based guidelines on wound management in the horse. Study design Evidence review using the GRADE framework. Methods Research questions were proposed by a panel of veterinarians, and developed into PICO format. Evidence in the veterinary literature was evaluated using the GRADE evidence‐to‐decision framework. Searches for human evidence summaries were conducted in the NICE, Cochrane and JBI databases. Final recommendations were based on both veterinary and human evidence. Results and recommendations The research questions were categorised into three areas: A. Wound lavage and topical treatments; B. Wound debridement and closure; C. Therapeutics for wound healing. Three hundred and six veterinary publications were identified across thirteen different topics. Fourteen papers were assessed using the GRADE criteria. Twenty‐five human evidence summaries were reviewed. The results were developed into recommendations: Wound lavage and topical treatments: (i) Tap water should be considered instead of saline for lavage; (ii) Povidone iodine lavage should be considered for contaminated wounds; (iii) Topical silver sulfadiazine may not be suitable for acute wounds; (iv) Optimal lavage pressures are around 13 psi. Wound debridement and closure: (i) Debridement pads should be considered for wound preparation; (ii) Larvae debridement should be considered in selected cases; (iii) Hydrosurgery should be considered in acute contaminated wounds. Therapeutics for wound healing: (i) Honey may reduce duration of some phases of wound healing. There was insufficient evidence to draw conclusions on the use of chemical debridement, therapeutic ultrasound, laser therapy, wound closure with staples compared to sutures, or identify optimal concentrations of antiseptic lavage solutions. Main limitations Low quality evidence in veterinary literature; majority of recommendations were based on human evidence. Conclusions These findings should be used to inform decision‐making in equine primary care practice.