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Follow on Google News | Young Patients With Chronic Wounds Can Be Helped With Patented Medical HoneyChronic, non-healing wounds can be a serious problem for children as many currently available treatment modalities can be too harsh or toxic.
By: Derma Sciences The first investigator, Roxana Reyna RNC, WCC, studied three young patients at Driscoll Children’s Hospital in Corpus Christi. All underwent a number of treatments—including IV antibiotic therapy, advanced wound care dressings, negative pressure wound therapy, and topical antimicrobial dressings—yet their wounds failed to make satisfactory progress toward healing, and slough, pain, exudates, and odor remained. Reyna’s first patient, a 17-year-old male, suffered from hidradenitis suppurativa for three years.Surgical debridement, negative pressure wound therapy dressings, skin grafts, and topical wound care dressings were applied but failed to heal his wounds. Yet shortly after a MEDIHONEY dressing was applied every other day, his pain, exudates, and odor disappeared. His wounds were well on the way to healing after seven weeks of treatment. Another patient, a 14-year-old female, also with hidradenitis suppurativa, had received negative pressure wound therapy, yet one wound developed increased exudates with malodor. Caregivers applied MEDIHONEY dressings. The exudates decreased, and the odor was completely eradicated by the second dressing change. She was on the way to healing by the end of the first week. And an 18-year-old male who had developed an unstageable ischial pressure ulcer during an episode of sepsis related to an infected dialysis catheter, was initially treated with surgical debridement and negative pressure wound therapy. The wound exhibited slough, exudates and malodor. When MEDIHONEY was applied to the slough, followed by application of negative pressure wound therapy three times per week, the slough dissipated, exudates diminished, malodor was completely eradicated and healing was noted. The second investigator, Charleen Deo RN, BSN, CWOCN, studied five pediatric patients at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford in Palo Alto. Again, all had chronic, non-healing wounds that were not responding to available therapy. However, within one week, application of MEDIHONEY resulted in improvement in all wounds. For example, an 11-year-old boy developed a wound on his left calf prior to receiving cardiac transplant surgery. Post-operatively he was receiving steroid therapy, but after three weeks the wound had failed to improve. Caregivers applied a MEDIHONEY dressing covered with a foam island dressing every three days. By the second dressing change, the boy’s pain was considerably decreased; by the second week, eschar lifted painlessly when the dressing was removed. By week five, the wound was healed. A 17-year-old male with a history of osteosarcoma was admitted with a chronic non-healing wound on the left lateral malleolus. Debridement, bacitracin and foam island dressings proved ineffective for a month. A MEDIHONEY dressing was applied and covered with self-adhesive soft silicone faced polyurethane foam island dressing, with the dressing being changed every three days. Within one week the wound was completely healed. And a 13-year-old girl with a history of spina bifida presented with a chronic, non-healing, three-month- “The reported cases spotlight the remarkable role that MEDIHONEY can play in advanced wound care in pediatric settings,” said Nurse Reyna. “The problems posed by chronic, non-healing wounds are no less challenging in younger patients than in adults, and this honey’s ability to alleviate their suffering gives it a significant role to play in planning a suitable course of treatment.” # # # We are The Investor Relations Group (IRG), a full-service corporate communications firm that provides investor relations and public relations services to nano-, micro- and small-cap companies providing them with large-cap services. Please visit us at www.irgnews.com End
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