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The potential of a canister‐based single‐use negative‐pressure wound therapy system delivering a greater and continuous absolute pressure level to facilitate better surgical wound care
Author(s) -
Orlov Aleksei,
Gefen Amit
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
international wound journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.867
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1742-481X
pISSN - 1742-4801
DOI - 10.1111/iwj.13744
Subject(s) - medicine , negative pressure wound therapy , wound healing , fibrous joint , surgical wound , surgery , biomedical engineering , pathology , alternative medicine
Two types of single‐use negative‐pressure wound therapy systems are currently available to treat surgical wounds: Canister‐based and canisterless. This work was aimed to evaluate the performance of a canister‐based vs a canisterless system, each with a different negative‐pressure setting and technology for fluid management. Continuous delivery of a specified level of negative pressure to the wound bed is hypothesised to be important for promoting surgical wound healing, by achieving continuous reduction of lateral tension in the wound, particularly through decrease of skin stress concentrations around suture insertion sites. To test the above hypothesis, we developed a computational modelling framework, a laboratory bench‐test for simulated clinical use and had further conducted a pre‐clinical study in a porcine model for closed incision. We specifically focussed on the impact of effective fluid management for continuous delivery of a stable, consistent negative pressure and the consequences of potential losses of the pressure level over the therapy period. We found that a greater (absolute) negative‐pressure level and its continuous, consistent delivery through controlled fluid management technology, by removing excess fluid from the dressing, provides far superior biomechanical performances. These conditions are more likely to result in better quality of the repaired tissues.

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