Handheld fluorescence imaging device detects subclinical wound infection in an asymptomatic patient with chronic diabetic foot ulcer: a case report

Chronic wounds are a significant burden to global patient and health care infrastructures, and there is a need for better methods of early wound diagnosis and treatment. Traditional diagnosis of chronic wound infection by pathogenic bacteria, using clinical signs and symptoms, is based on visual ins...

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Veröffentlicht in:International wound journal 2016-08, Vol.13 (4), p.449-453
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Yichao C, Smith, Marlie, Chu, Ashley, Lindvere-Teene, Liis, Starr, Danielle, Tapang, Kim, Shekhman, Rachel, Wong, Olive, Linden, Ron, DaCosta, Ralph S
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container_end_page 453
container_issue 4
container_start_page 449
container_title International wound journal
container_volume 13
creator Wu, Yichao C
Smith, Marlie
Chu, Ashley
Lindvere-Teene, Liis
Starr, Danielle
Tapang, Kim
Shekhman, Rachel
Wong, Olive
Linden, Ron
DaCosta, Ralph S
description Chronic wounds are a significant burden to global patient and health care infrastructures, and there is a need for better methods of early wound diagnosis and treatment. Traditional diagnosis of chronic wound infection by pathogenic bacteria, using clinical signs and symptoms, is based on visual inspection under white light and microbiological sampling (e.g. swabbing and/or biopsy) of the wound, which are subjective and suboptimal. Diagnosing microbial infection based on traditional clinical signs and symptoms in wounds of asymptomatic patients is especially challenging at the bedside. Bacteria are invisible to the unaided eye and wound sampling for diagnostic testing can cause unacceptable delays in diagnosis and treatment. To address this problem, we developed a new prototype handheld, portable fluorescence imaging device that enables non‐contact, real‐time, high‐resolution visualisation of pathogenic bacteria and tissues in wounds. Herein, we report the clinical use of this imaging device in detecting subsurface heavy bacterial load and subclinical local infection in an asymptomatic 50‐year‐old patient with a non‐healing diabetic foot ulcer.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/iwj.12451
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subjects Bacteria
Bacterial Load
Diabetic Foot
Diabetic wounds
Humans
Infection
Medical device
Middle Aged
Optical imaging
Original
Wound Infection
title Handheld fluorescence imaging device detects subclinical wound infection in an asymptomatic patient with chronic diabetic foot ulcer: a case report
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