Revisiting the Role of Amniotic Membrane Dressing in Acute Large Traumatic Wounds: A Randomized Feasibility Study at a Level 1 Trauma Centre

Author:

Choudhary Narendra1,Kumar Abhinav1,Priyadarshini Pratyusha1,Bagaria Dinesh1,Alam Junaid1,Soni Kapil Dev2,Kumar Vivek3,Sagar Sushma1,Gupta Amit1,Kumar Subodh1,Mohanty Sujata4

Affiliation:

1. Division of Trauma Surgery and Critical Care, JPN Apex Trauma Centre, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India

2. Department of Critical and Intensive Care, JPN Apex Trauma Centre, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India

3. Department of Trauma Surgery, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India

4. Department of Stem Cell Facility, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India

Abstract

Introduction: Acute large traumatic wounds require temporary dressing prior to the definitive soft tissue reconstruction, as the physiological derangement during the immediate postinjury period delays the definitive surgical intervention. Selecting an ideal dressing material from numerous available synthetic dressings and skin substitutes poses a challenge. Although amniotic membrane (AM) scaffold has a definitive role in promoting wound healing in burns and chronic wounds, however, its efficacy in acute large traumatic wound is lacking. The present trial aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of AM in wound bed preparation before the definitive soft-tissue reconstruction in acute large traumatic wounds. Methods: Sixty patients with acute large traumatic wounds (>10 cm × 10 cm) were divided into two groups (conventional dressing and AM dressing) using simple mixed block randomization. Wounds were assessed using the Bates Jensen Score at various timelines for the signs of early wound healing. The primary outcome was to evaluate the time taken for the wound bed preparation for definitive soft-tissue reconstruction. The secondary outcome was the pain assessment and complications, if any. Results: There was significant reduction in the wound exudate as well as peripheral tissue edema in the intervention group (P = 0.01). AM dressing was significantly less painful (P = 0.01). The incidence of wound infection and need for debridement was decreased in the intervention group. However, the time interval to definitive soft-tissue coverage was statistically insignificant and comparable in both the groups. No adverse reactions were seen in either group. Conclusion: AM dressings are safe and efficacious with significant reduction in wound exudates and peripheral edema. However, these dressings do not hasten the wound maturation as compared to conventional dressings. AM dressings can be used as a less painful alternative to conventional dressing in the management of large acute posttraumatic wounds.

Publisher

Medknow

Subject

Emergency Medicine

Reference27 articles.

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4. Identification of antiangiogenic and antiinflammatory proteins in human amniotic membrane;Hao;Cornea,2000

5. Antibacterial properties of human amniotic membranes;Talmi;Placenta,1991

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