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Chapter 47 - Negative Pressure Therapy for Soft Tissue Wounds

from Section 11 - Soft Tissues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2019

Demetrios Demetriades
Affiliation:
University of Southern California
Kenji Inaba
Affiliation:
University of Southern California
George Velmahos
Affiliation:
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
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Summary

  • Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) provides a closed, moist environment with a regulated level of negative pressure to the wound bed, stimulating perfusion and granulation tissue formation, reduction of local edema, removal of infected fluid, and wound volume contraction.

  • NPWT can be used in a variety of wounds, including large traumatic wounds, fasciotomy sites, skin grafted wounds or burns, necrotizing soft tissue infections, infected orthopedic hardware or joints, and wounds with exposed or infected bone or tendon.

  • The recommended optimal negative pressure is 125 mmHg.

  • Veraflo therapy is a specialized wound dressing that combines negative pressure therapy with automated intermittent wound irrigation. The system instills irrigation fluid into the wound, allows soaking of the wound for determined period of time (usually 10–20 minutes), followed by negative pressure for a defined period of time (usually 3–4 hours). The settings and instillation volume can be customized as needed.

  • The principles of soft tissue wound management differ significantly based on whether or not infection is present.

    • For noninfected soft tissue defects, such as large traumatic wounds, operative management is guided by debridement of dead or ischemic tissues and wound approximation, where possible. Negative pressure therapy may be applied as an adjunct to stimulate granulation tissue formation and wound shrinkage.

    • For infected wounds, operative management is guided by debridement of all infected and necrotic tissue. Systemic antibiotics are often necessary for invasive infections. NPWT with intermittent irrigation (VAC Veraflo System) may be locally applied to enhance wound granulation and closure and decrease bacterial burden as well as frequency of debridements.

  • Appropriate surgical debridement and wound hemostasis are imperative prior to application of NPWT.

  • NPWT reduces the number of surgical debridements, is more comfortable than the traditional dressings, shortens the time to wound closure and hospital stay, and lowers costs.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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