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Dissolved oxygen technologies as a novel strategy for non-healing wounds: A critical review

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Autor
Ntentakis D.P., Ntentaki A.M., Delavogia E., Kalomoiris L., Venieri D., Arkadopoulos N., Kalogerakis N.
Fecha
2021
Language
en
DOI
10.1111/wrr.12972
Materia
dissolved oxygen
hydrogel
hypoxia inducible factor 1alpha
oxygen
aqueous solution
atmospheric pressure
biotechnology
cell viability
collagen synthesis
comparative study
Embase
epithelization
evidence based medicine
human
manufacturing
Medline
meta analysis
nanoemulsion
plastic surgery
quantitative analysis
Review
skin biopsy
skin injury
skin penetration
surface charge
systematic review
ultraviolet radiation
Web of Science
wound care
wound healing
bandage
hydrogel
Bandages
Hydrogels
Oxygen
Wound Healing
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Resumen
Non-healing wounds are steadily becoming a global-health issue. Prolonged hypoxia propagates wound chronicity; yet, oxygenating treatments are considered inadequate to date. Dissolved oxygen (DO) in aqueous solutions introduces a novel approach to enhanced wound oxygenation, and is robustly evaluated for clinical applications. A systematic literature search was conducted, whereby experimental and clinical studies of DO technologies were categorized per engineering approach. Technical principles, methodology, endpoints and outcomes were analysed for both oxygenating and healing effects. Forty articles meeting our inclusion criteria were grouped as follows: DO solutions (17), oxygen (O2) dressings (9), O2 hydrogels (11) and O2 emulsions (3). All technologies improved wound oxygenation, each to a variable degree. They also achieved at least one statistically significant outcome related to wound healing, mainly in epithelialization, angiogenesis and collagen synthesis. Scarcity in clinical data and methodological variability precluded quantitative comparisons among the biotechnologies studied. DO technologies warrantee further evaluation for wound oxygenation in the clinical setting. Standardised methodologies and targeted research questions are pivotal to facilitate global integration in healthcare. © 2021 The Wound Healing Society.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/77344
Colecciones
  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ. [19735]
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