Hydrosurgery as a safe and efficient debridement method in a clinical wound unit
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Author
Other authors
Publication date
2017ISSN
0969-0700
Abstract
Objective: Hydrosurgical debridement allows removal of non-viable
tissue, preserving healthy tissues. This study was designed to analyse
whether hydrosurgery, used in a clinical wounds unit, is an effective
and safe method that may reduce debridement time.
Methods: Patients’ wounds had the following characteristics: wounds
with devitalised tissue needing rapid debridement, wounds with
cavities, or non-healing wounds. Hydrosurgical debridement uses a
pressurised stream of saline (0.9% sodium chloride) and a vacuum
around this stream to remove the devitalised tissue of the wound,
preserving healthy surrounding tissues.
Results: This prospective study comprised of 53 wounds from
39 patients. The wound aetiology included 39.7% arterial insufficiency,
22.6% pressure ulcers (PUs), 15.1% diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs),
9.4% venous leg ulcers (VLUs), and 13.2% from other aetiologies. The
percentage of wounds according the size was the following: 32.1%
(<10cm2), 43.4% (10–49cm2), 15.1% (50–99cm2), and 9.4% (≥100cm2).
Superficial wounds were 43.4% of the total and 56.6% of wounds had
cavities. Pain associated with the hydrosurgery was mild to moderate.
There were no hydrosurgery-related adverse events. For effective
debridement, the required sessions were as follows: one procedure
(73.6%), two procedures (18.9%) and three procedures (7.5%). There
was a statistical significant direct correlation (r=0.307) between the
number of required sessions and wound size. All patients improved in a
week (>80% of granulation tissue).
Conclusion: We demonstrate that hydrosurgery is an effective and rapid
debridement method that can be used safely in the outpatient setting.
Declaration of interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest
to declare.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
616.5 - Skin. Common integument. Clinical dermatology. Cutaneous complaints
Keywords
Pages
6 p.
Publisher
MA Healthcare
Citation
Ferrer-Sola, M., Sureda-Vidal, H., Altimiras-Roset, J., Fontsere-Candell, E., Gonzalez-Martinez, V., Espaulella-Panicot, J., Falanga, V., Otero-Viñas, M. (2017) Hydrosurgery as a safe and efficient debridement method in a clinical wound unit. Journal of wound care, 26(10), 593-599. https://doi.org/10.12968/jowc.2017.26.10.593
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