Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to test the following hypotheses: 1. Early use of water-soluble surfactant dressing (WSD) on partial-thickness burn wounds will result in tissue salvage and reduce surgical burden. 2. Early use of WSD on partial-thickness burn wounds will result in faster healing. 3. Use of WSD on partial-thickness burn wounds will result in less painful wound care. 4. Early use of WSD on partial-thickness burn wounds will result in less infection. 5. Early use of WSD on partial-thickness burn wounds will result in lower hospital costs.


Clinical Trial Description

Surfactant-based wound dressings have been utilized in chronic, non-healing wounds and small burn wounds to soften and aid removal of wound debris. In vitro data suggest enhanced healing properties are due the ability to stabilize and potentially reseal plasma membranes, thereby, retaining cellular integrity and enhance wound healing. Improved cellular viability and functionality has also been established in heat-shock, ionizing radiation, and electrical injury models. In one rat model, topically suffused mesentery demonstrated improved microvascular flow and reduction in the number of abnormally flowing microvessels following thermal injury. Intravenous administration has been studied in several disease states. In thermal injury, intravenous administration has shown potential to improve blood flow and reduce the zone of coagulation. Further, surfactant-based wound dressings are non-ionic and may facilitate removal, sensitize, or prevent bacterial biofilms. Biofilms are an evolved, protective mechanism bacteria utilize to reduce antimicrobial efficacy. Removal or penetration of biofilms is essential for bacterial eradication. There is little evidence demonstrating the efficacy of early use of a WSD for treating partial-thickness burn wounds. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04880655
Study type Interventional
Source University of Tennessee
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date August 3, 2021
Completion date October 24, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05023135 - DeepView SnapShot Portable (DV-SSP): Device Training Study
Completed NCT05276869 - Reliability and Feasibility of WeeFIM Instrument to Measure Functional Independence in Pediatric Burns
Completed NCT04548635 - VR for Burn Dressing Changes at Home Phase 2/Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06076031 - Effects of Applying Streaming Media on Reducing Pain in Patient With Second-degree Burn During Changing Dressing N/A
Recruiting NCT05084248 - Vitamin D Deficiency in Adults Following a Major Burn Injury Phase 4
Completed NCT03113253 - TRANexamic Acid to Reduce Bleeding in BURN Surgery Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04090424 - Assessment of Safety and Effectiveness of NovoSorb® BTM in Severe Burns N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05649891 - Checklists Resuscitation Emergency Department N/A
Withdrawn NCT03159182 - Study of Silicone Material Inserts To Treat Burn Scars N/A
Recruiting NCT02904941 - Human Amniotic Versus Synthetic Membrane as a Transient Skin Cover for Pediatric Burns N/A
Completed NCT02681757 - Comparison of Mepitel Ag vs Antibiotic Ointment Used With Soft Cast Technique for Treatment of Pediatric Burns N/A
Recruiting NCT01812941 - Evaluation of Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Severe Burn and Trauma Patients N/A
Completed NCT01437852 - StrataGraft® Skin Tissue as an Alternative to Autografting Deep Partial-Thickness Burns Phase 1
Completed NCT01214811 - Open Multi-centre Investigation to Evaluate Signs and Symptoms of Local Inflammation/Infection on Chronic Ulcers and Partial Thickness Burns When Using Mepilex Border Ag as an Anti-microbial Wound Dressing Phase 3
Completed NCT01061502 - Efficacy Study of a Bioelectric Dressing to Treat Skin Graft Donor Site Wounds Phase 1/Phase 2
Terminated NCT00822796 - Thermogard™ Efficacy Trial N/A
Terminated NCT00824681 - Effect of Music Therapy on Families of Burn Patients Phase 1
Terminated NCT00634166 - Effects of Therapy With Sulfamylon® 5% Topical Solution Compared to a Historical Control Group Phase 4
Terminated NCT00464386 - Continuous Glucose Monitoring (POC) in the ICU N/A
Withdrawn NCT00216983 - Proline Metabolism in Severely Burned Patients: Effect of Modulated Parenteral Feeding N/A