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Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to comparison of physical microstructure-modified transparent silicone films and current conventional trauma dressings for second-degree burn wounds and post-skin graft wounds.The main question it aims to answer is : The development of a new type of wound dressing is urgently needed because existing wound dressings cannot be transparent, easy to change, easy to store and inexpensive at the same time. Participants will receive routine wound treatment, after which they will be covered with a clear silicone membrane with physical microstructure modification. Researchers will compare vaseline gauze group and decellularised pigskin group o see if transparent silicone film with physical microstructure modifications promotes wound healing, reduces the number of dressing changes, reduces the damage to the wound and painful irritation to the patient during dressing changes, thus improving the quality of wound repair and saving medical costs.


Clinical Trial Description

In this study, a single-centre, autologous petrolatum gauze or decellularised pig skin treatment was used to study the effect of physical microstructure-modified transparent silicone membranes on the repair of second-degree burn wounds and implant-area wounds in a parallel controlled study using a randomised controlled clinical trial. In this study, 40 patients were enrolled in the burn surgery department of the First Affiliated Hospital of the Naval Military Medical University, with 20 second-degree burn wounds and 20 implant-area wounds each. The same patients were divided into a conventional treatment group (second-degree burn wounds covered with decellularized pig skin and implant-area wounds covered with petroleum jelly gauze) and a silicone film-covered group according to the computerized random number method. After routine clinical treatment of the wounds, the wounds were covered with the corresponding dressings according to the groups, and the healing rate, transparency of the dressings, adhesion of the dressings to the wounds, pain level of the patients when the dressings were removed, infection rate of the wounds and incidence of adverse reactions were observed. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06170008
Study type Interventional
Source Changhai Hospital
Contact Shichu Xiao, PhD
Phone +86 13166379405
Email huangzhuoxiao@sohu.com
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date December 30, 2023
Completion date December 30, 2026