Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds

Background: Carboxymethylchitosan is a chitosan-derivative obtained from the carboxymethylation of chitin with chloroacetic acid in alkaline solution. It has shown its potential in animal model studies as an accelerator of wound healing. Materials and methods: Prospective, comparative clinical trial...

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Main Authors: Angspatt,A., Taweerattanasil,B., Janvikul,W., Chokrungvaranont,P., Sirimaharaj,W.
Format: Article
Published: IOS Press 2015
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/38224
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-382242015-06-16T07:46:39Z Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds Angspatt,A. Taweerattanasil,B. Janvikul,W. Chokrungvaranont,P. Sirimaharaj,W. Medicine (all) Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) Background: Carboxymethylchitosan is a chitosan-derivative obtained from the carboxymethylation of chitin with chloroacetic acid in alkaline solution. It has shown its potential in animal model studies as an accelerator of wound healing. Materials and methods: Prospective, comparative clinical trials of traditional tulle gauze, alginate membrane, and carboxymethylchitosan sponge were carried out in the treatment of partial-thickness skin graft donor sites. Between June 2005 and March 2006, 70 donor sites from 44 patients were randomly treated by these three different wound dressing materials. Each wound was treated until it was completely healed, and a visual analogue scale was used for the pain evaluation. Results: The results showed that the donor sites dressed with carboxymethylchitosan or alginate healed more rapidly than those treated with tulle gauze. There was no significant difference in the healing rate between carboxymethylchitosan and alginate. The pain scores evaluated among these three dressing groups did not significantly differ. Conclusion: Carboxymethylchitosan is as efficacious as traditional tulle gauze or alginate membrain in the treatment of partial thickness skin graft donor sites. 2015-06-16T07:46:39Z 2015-06-16T07:46:39Z 2011-06-01 Article 19057415 2-s2.0-84866546758 10.5372/1905-7415.0503.054 http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84866546758&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/38224 IOS Press
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine (all)
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)
spellingShingle Medicine (all)
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)
Angspatt,A.
Taweerattanasil,B.
Janvikul,W.
Chokrungvaranont,P.
Sirimaharaj,W.
Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
description Background: Carboxymethylchitosan is a chitosan-derivative obtained from the carboxymethylation of chitin with chloroacetic acid in alkaline solution. It has shown its potential in animal model studies as an accelerator of wound healing. Materials and methods: Prospective, comparative clinical trials of traditional tulle gauze, alginate membrane, and carboxymethylchitosan sponge were carried out in the treatment of partial-thickness skin graft donor sites. Between June 2005 and March 2006, 70 donor sites from 44 patients were randomly treated by these three different wound dressing materials. Each wound was treated until it was completely healed, and a visual analogue scale was used for the pain evaluation. Results: The results showed that the donor sites dressed with carboxymethylchitosan or alginate healed more rapidly than those treated with tulle gauze. There was no significant difference in the healing rate between carboxymethylchitosan and alginate. The pain scores evaluated among these three dressing groups did not significantly differ. Conclusion: Carboxymethylchitosan is as efficacious as traditional tulle gauze or alginate membrain in the treatment of partial thickness skin graft donor sites.
format Article
author Angspatt,A.
Taweerattanasil,B.
Janvikul,W.
Chokrungvaranont,P.
Sirimaharaj,W.
author_facet Angspatt,A.
Taweerattanasil,B.
Janvikul,W.
Chokrungvaranont,P.
Sirimaharaj,W.
author_sort Angspatt,A.
title Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
title_short Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
title_full Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
title_fullStr Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
title_full_unstemmed Carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: A comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
title_sort carboxymethylchitosan, alginate and tulle gauze wound dressings: a comparative study in the treatment of partial-thickness wounds
publisher IOS Press
publishDate 2015
url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84866546758&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/38224
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