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Professor Malin Malmsjö, MD, PhD. Photo.

Malin Malmsjö

Professor

Professor Malin Malmsjö, MD, PhD. Photo.

A Rigid Disc for Protection of Exposed Blood Vessels During Negative Pressure Wound Therapy

Author

  • Erik Anesater
  • Ola Borgquist
  • Christian Torbrand
  • Markus Roupé
  • Richard Ingemansson
  • Sandra Lindstedt Ingemansson
  • Malin Malmsjö

Summary, in English

Background. There are increasing reports of serious complications and deaths associated with negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT). Bleeding may occur when NPWT is applied to a wound with exposed blood vessels. Inserting a rigid disc in the wound may protect these structures. The authors examined the effects of rigid discs on wound bed tissue pressure and blood flow through a large blood vessel in the wound bed during NPWT. Methods. Wounds were created over the femoral artery in the groin of 8 pigs. Rigid discs were inserted. Wound bed pressures and arterial blood flow were measured during NPWT. Results. Pressure transduction to the wound bed was similar for control wounds and wounds with discs. Blood flow through the femoral artery decreased in control wounds. When a disc was inserted, the blood flow was restored. Conclusions. NPWT causes hypoperfusion in the wound bed tissue, presumably as a result of mechanical deformation. The insertion of a rigid barrier alleviates this effect and restores blood flow.

Department/s

  • Ophthalmology, Lund
  • Infection Medicine (BMC)
  • Thoracic Surgery

Publishing year

2013

Language

English

Pages

74-80

Publication/Series

Surgical Innovation

Volume

20

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Topic

  • Surgery

Keywords

  • experimental surgery
  • wound healing
  • negative pressure wound therapy
  • microvascular blood flow

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1553-3506