View clinical trials related to Skin Ulcer.
Filter by:The etiology of non-healing ulcers depends on both systemic and local factors. The introduction of advanced dressing, negative wound therapy and compression therapy have undoubtedly improved clinical outcomes. The principal aim of study was to demonstrate the efficacy of skin micrografts in the treatment of skin substance loss.
The project rolls out combined innovative low-tech thermotherapy with heat packs and WHO recommended wound management in a Buruli ulcer (BU)-endemic district of West Africa. It addresses three key areas of considerable clinical and public health importance in the region: - to better help people managing the disabling disease BU that primarily affects children in West Africa - to implement WHO recommended general wound management for all types of wounds with tools available at the peripheral level of the health care system - to prevent systemic life threatening sequelae (e.g. sepsis and rheumatic fever) and permanent local damage (e.g. motor and sensory disability) by early recognition and treatment of wounds at the community level. The project translates available research findings already validated on the secondary health care level into clinical practice at the periphery (primary health care level). The string of the investigator's previous work from the development of the BU thermotherapy-wound management-package to the proof of its efficacy provides all necessary skills, tools and documents to immediately proceed into practical community application. Operational endpoints are - coverage and quality of WHO recommended wound management training of health care personnel at the primary health care level (health posts); - coverage, success rate and quality of care for patients with BU and other wounds; denominator controlled at health post level and high-quality Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSS) data. The project is embedded into a stable multidisciplinary working environment at Côte d'Ivoire, including an HDSS with a longstanding record of partnership and successful community-based operational research. The project builds on the principles laid out by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and - targets all patients with a broken down skin barrier independent of the cause (patient centred health care) - brings diagnosis and treatment close to the community - educates and trains both community members and health care workers - measures the health intervention outcome The project is fully in line with the new integrated strategy for the skin NTDs of WHO's Department of Control of NTDs (WHO/NTD).
To evaluate the effect of human amniotic membrane as a weekly dressing on chronic wounds in Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) patients.
The investigators want to obtain the clinical profile, hematological profile, and biochemical profile from diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) patient.
The study is a randomised controlled trial of patients admitted for a scheduled cardiac surgery at the Clermont-Ferrand hospital. Patients meeting the study inclusion criteria will be allocated to either the control group that will receive pressure ulcer prevention standard care or the intervention group that will receive pressure ulcer prevention standard care plus have a Mepilex® Border dressing applied to their sacrum.
Assess the effect of iontophoresis of treprostinil on wound closure over 12 weeks, in patients with DFU. In the present study the investigators aim at establishing the proof-of-concept of iontophoresis of treprostinil as a potential treatment of diabetic foot ulcers in humans. The main hypothesis is that in patients with DFUs, the pharmacodynamic effect of a PGI2 analogue potentiates the effect of low-intensity current on microvascular function, tissue oxygenation and healing.
This project is based on investigator team's ten year experience on diabetic ulcer and goes on further developing basic research and concluding clinical experience. The investigator team has recently developed "Remove stasis to generate granulation tissue" into "Remove slough to generate granulation tissue". Investigators have applied the principle of "Remove stasis" in the medium and later stage of treatment to make "Remove slough-Eliminate stasis-Generate granulation tissue" become the basic principle of three-stage sequential treatment. Investigators will further conclude Chinese medicine therapy in the stage of "Qing-Hua-Bu" and evaluate safety, applicability and availability of it. Therefore, the research can help improve clinical diagnosis and treatment technique and transfer the study result of Chinese medicine experience on diabetic ulcer.
A monocentric cluster-crossover design has been used in this study to test the effectiveness of a 3-in-1 perineal care washcloth versus standard of care (e.g., water and pH neutral soap) to prevent and treat pressure ulcers in ICUs.
To evaluate the using of a commercial product of dried human amniotic membrane sterilized by gamma irradiation for the treatment of skin ulcer.
A randomized controlled trial will be performed to confirm preliminary uncontrolled data indicating that regional adipose tissue grafting is effective in inducing digital ulcer healing in patients with systemic sclerosis. Systemic Sclerosis patients with digital ulcers will be randomized to be blindly treated with adipose tissue implantation or a sham procedure. Adipose tissue grafting will consist of injection at the base of the finger with digital ulcer of 0.5-1 ml of adipose tissue after centrifugation of fat aspirate. Sharm procedure will consist of false liposuction and local injection of saline solution. The primary end-point will be to compare the cumulative prevalence of healed digital ulcers in the two groups within the following 8 weeks.