The efficacy of moisture retentive ointment in the mangement of cutaneous wounds and ulcers: A multicenter clinical trial
Local management of chronic wounds and ulcers remains one of the most costly unsolved problems in health care today. With proper clinical management, most chronic wound healing problems can be resolved and healing expected, though recurrence may be common. The recent logarithmic growth in our knowle...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Indian journal of plastic surgery 2003-07, Vol.36 (2), p.89-98 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Local management of chronic wounds and ulcers remains one of the most
costly unsolved problems in health care today. With proper clinical
management, most chronic wound healing problems can be resolved and
healing expected, though recurrence may be common. The recent
logarithmic growth in our knowledge about wound healing and the
appreciation of the importance of a moist environment in optimal wound
healing has led to the introduction of new and exciting therapeutic
modalities. In view of the many practical disadvantages as well as the
serious complications of currently available moisture retentive
dressings when applied to chronic contaminated wounds, a prospective
multicenter clinical trial was conducted from December 1999 to November
2000 to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a newly introduced moisture
retentive ointment (MEBO: Moist Exposed Burn Ointment) (Julphar - Gulf
Pharmaceutical Industries, UAE) in the local wound care of problematic
non-healing wounds. The active component of the ointment is
β-sitosterol in a base of beeswax, sesame oil and other
components. Though it was not a comparative study, the ointment was
found to induce rapid reduction in ulcer size even after a prolonged
stagnant state with other therapeutic modalities without complications
such as skin maceration, unmanageable excessive exudation, and wound
infection. As expected with such chronic wounds, the healing potential
of local ointment application is limited by the mere size of the
original defect and the underlying pathologies and associated diseases.
however, the safety and practicality of simple ointment application was
found to be a valid alternative treatment for local management of
chronic wounds. |
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ISSN: | 0970-0358 |