Influence of advanced wound matrices on observed vacuum pressure during simulated negative pressure wound therapy

Biomaterials and negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) are treatment modalities regularly used together to accelerate soft-tissue regeneration. This study evaluated the impact of the design and composition of commercially available collagen-based matrices on the observed vacuum pressure delivered u...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials 2023-02, Vol.138, p.105620-105620, Article 105620
Hauptverfasser: Veale, Robert W.F., Kollmetz, Tarek, Taghavi, Navid, Duston-Fursman, Claudia G., Beeson, Matthew T., Asefi, Dorrin, Chittock, Henry D., Vikranth, Ananth S., Dowling, Shane G., Dempsey, Sandi G., Rose, Hamish J., Mason, Isaac T.T., May, Barnaby C.H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Biomaterials and negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) are treatment modalities regularly used together to accelerate soft-tissue regeneration. This study evaluated the impact of the design and composition of commercially available collagen-based matrices on the observed vacuum pressure delivered under NPWT using a custom test apparatus. Specifically, testing compared the effect of the commercial products; ovine forestomach matrix (OFM), collagen/oxidized regenerated cellulose (collagen/ORC) and a collagen-based dressing (CWD) on the observed vacuum pressure. OFM resulted in an ∼50% reduction in the observed target vacuum pressure at 75 mmHg and 125 mmHg, however, this effect was mitigated to a ∼0% reduction when fenestrations were introduced into the matrix. Both collagen/ORC and CWD reduced the observed vacuum pressure at 125 mmHg (∼15% and ∼50%, respectively), and this was more dramatic when a lower vacuum pressure of 75 mmHg was delivered (∼20% and ∼75%, respectively). The reduced performance of the reconstituted collagen products is thought to result from the gelling properties of these products that may cause occlusion of the delivered vacuum to the wound bed. These findings highlight the importance of in vitro testing to establish the impact of adjunctive therapies on NPWT, where effective delivery of vacuum pressure is paramount to the efficacy of this therapy. [Display omitted] •Concomitant use of collagen dermal matrices and NPWT is widespread in wound healing.•Optimal NPWT vacuum pressure is known to be between 75 and 125 mmHg.•Dermal matrices can reduce the observed vacuum pressure by up to 75%.•Dermal matrices designed to be compatible with NPWT mitigate pressure reduction.
ISSN:1751-6161
1878-0180
DOI:10.1016/j.jmbbm.2022.105620