Removing Deterrents Without Adding Potentially Harmful Agents: A New Paradigm for Effective Wound Healing
April 2014
Surgical incisions and traumatic lacerations are closed through wound approximation. Chronic wounds and large-surface burn wounds cannot be closed by primary intention. Many advanced wound dressings, skin substitutes, and peptide growth factors have been used with varying success to assist wound healing by secondary intention. Tertiary closure by pedicled or free flaps, or by split-thickness skin grafts, fulfills the “gold standard” for wound closure (ie, closure with autologous skin). To accomplish the goal of increasing function while decreasing the rate of disabilities and hospital stays,1 many different medicants, drugs, and dressings have been introduced into today’s market and onto wounds. However, not all of these products have been innocuous to wound tissue. The Hippocratic injunction to “not harm the patient” is enunciated by Thomas Sydenham in the Latin expression, “primum non nocere.”2 Based on these principles, a new paradigm for effective wound healing is presented by simplifying the overall approach to wound care.
This new paradigm is designed around meticulous wound bed preparation to allow the wound to proceed to endogenous healing or to set the stage for successful wound closure with autologous tissue.3 This approach is accomplished by removing deterrents to normal healing without adding any agents that might interrupt the normal cellular or humoral processes of the wound healing scheme.
This article will discuss the methodology and provide a clinical case file behind this new paradigm.
Using the combination of Vashe and Drawtex, wound bed preparation is optimized for those wounds healing by secondary intention. For wounds that are not proceeding rapidly to closure, an Xpansion® Micro-autografting Kit (SteadMed Medical LLC) can be used to allow a method of grafting epidermis and dermis to the wound as an outpatient procedure without using an operating theater and with a minimal donor site.
This technique allows a small split-thickness autograft to be expanded up to 100 times in order to minimize the donor site.8 These microautografts allow the wound to be closed with autologous epidermis and dermis.
Wound Bed Preparation
Three products in particular have been added to the wound clinician’s armamentarium to accomplish this mode to healing. Following debridement of all necrotic and nonviable tissue, the wound can be cleansed with Vashe® Wound Therapy (SteadMed Medical LLC), a solution of hypochlorous acid (the body’s natural material for eliminating invading pathogens via the oxidative burst within neutrophils.)4 Vashe cleanses the wound by soaking and further debrides the wound by wiping the excess Vashe from the wound. Application of Drawtex® Hydroconductive Dressing (SteadMed Medical LLC) can then be used to draw off any remaining debris, slough, bacteria, and deleterious cytokines.5 Drawtex functions by a unique combination of three physical actions: capillary action, hydroconductive action, and electrostatic action.6,7 This approach does not introduce any substances into the wound that may have a degree of cytotoxicity, such as silver or antimicrobials.

