Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Surgeons easily get wound infections. Most wound infections will be cured by applying medicines and changing dressing in very short period of time. But some wounds are severely contaminated combined with fat liquefaction, crateriform ulcer and large undermined lacuna, so changing dressing takes a very long time. In order to better change the dressing, it needs to expose the wound thoroughly, which requires to completely open the healed skin, so the healing will be slowed down. Some scholars lay stress on prevention. Wound infection control concerns prevention--not therapy--of an infrequent but expensive kind of surgical morbidity.(1.2)Some scholars think that the main armamentarium of the attack is the use of topical anti-infectives, which invade the bacteria where they reside, and, consequently, reduce their numbers and promote wound healing.(3)For example, silver is reemerging as a viable treatment option for infections encountered in burns, open wounds, and chronic ulcers. But it is expensive and is difficult to acquire silver-containing dressings. And Recent findings, however, indicate that the compound delays the wound-healing process and that silver may have serious cytotoxic activity on various host cells. (4) As High concentration of sugar solution, honey appears to heal partial thickness burns more quickly than conventional treatment (which included polyurethane film, paraffin gauze, soframycin-impregnated gauze, sterile linen and leaving the burns exposed) and infected post-operative wounds more quickly than antiseptics and gauze.(5)This study involve the use of another high-concentration of sugar solution (HCSS) to lavage infected wounds when changing dressings.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02945761
Study type Interventional
Source Ningbo Municipal No.4 Hospital
Contact
Status Enrolling by invitation
Phase N/A
Start date October 2016

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT02905955 - Vacuumtherapy After Venous Hybrid Procedures Phase 4
Not yet recruiting NCT02868372 - Swabbing of Subcutaneous Tissues of Cesarean Section Wounds With Povidone Iodine N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT02559453 - Outcomes for 2 Operations Versus ≥ 3 Operations in Infected Wounds N/A
Completed NCT02744144 - Wound Bacterial Microbiota and Their Antibiotic Resistance N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01939145 - Comparing Outcomes for Prontosan Versus Normal Saline for Negative Pressure Wound Therapy With Instillation Phase 4
Completed NCT00998907 - PDS*Plus and Wound Infections After Laparotomy N/A
Completed NCT01141335 - Polypropylene Mesh Versus Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) Mesh in Inguinal Hernia Repair Phase 4
Completed NCT00576745 - A Comparison Of The 3M TM S Surgical Skin Closure System To The Standard Vicryl Suture Closure of Sternotomy Incisions During Cardiac Surgery Phase 1
Terminated NCT00654641 - Prevention of Wound Complications After Cesarean Delivery in Obese Women Utilizing Negative Pressure Wound Therapy N/A
Completed NCT00402727 - Comparison of Sequential IV/PO Moxifloxacin With IV Piperacillin/Tazobactam Followed by PO Amoxicillin/Clavulanic Acid in Patients With a Complicated Skin and Skin Structure Infection Phase 3
Recruiting NCT00150852 - Prevention of Gastrostomy-Related Wound Infection by Vancomycin in Carriers of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus. Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT03872544 - Short Term Status of Free Dermal Fat Autografts for Complex Craniofacial Wounds
Recruiting NCT04596124 - Effectiveness and Tolerability of Fitostimoline Plus Cream and Gauze vs Connettivina Bio Plus Cream and Gauze N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04584957 - Prophylactic Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (VAC) in Gynecologic Oncology (G.O.) N/A
Recruiting NCT03960970 - Two-drug Antibiotic Prophylaxis in Scheduled Cesarean Deliveries Phase 2
Enrolling by invitation NCT03880188 - Long Term Status of Free Dermal Fat Autografts for Complex Craniofacial Wounds
Completed NCT02018094 - The Amputation Surgical Site Infection Trial (ASSIT) Phase 4
Terminated NCT03269968 - Use of Negative Pressure Wound Therapy in Morbidly Obese Women After Cesarean Delivery N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02882360 - Kerlix for Pregnant Women With Elevated BMI to Prevent Wound Infection by 6 Weeks Post Partum Phase 4
Enrolling by invitation NCT01977989 - Vancomycin in Spine Surgery Phase 4