An alternative topical option to antimicrobials
wounds, wound care, Australia, professional, healthcare, expert, dressings, bandages, trauma, skin.
23172
post-template-default,single,single-post,postid-23172,single-format-standard,theme-stockholm,qode-social-login-1.1.3,stockholm-core-2.3.2,woocommerce-no-js,select-child-theme-ver-1.0.0,select-theme-ver-9.12,ajax_fade,page_not_loaded,,qode_menu_,qode-single-product-thumbs-below,wpb-js-composer js-comp-ver-7.9,vc_responsive
Title Image

An alternative topical option to antimicrobials

An alternative topical option to antimicrobials

Microbial resistance is an issue of concern for those of us who care for individuals who experience hard-to-heal wounds. The principles of wound bed preparation and biofilm based wound intervention direct us towards adequate tissue debridement and targeted use of antimicrobials. Rippon et al have recently published a sponsored article where the concept of physical bacterial removal rather than bacterial kill is proposed as an alternative means of reducing a wound’s microbial burden. The use of sequestration into super absorbent polymers, electrostatic charged particles to immobilise bacteria and hydrophobic contact layer dressings may provide a non-antimicrobial mechanism which thereby reduces the likelihood of a wound developing resistance through its own therapy. Rippon,M et al Effectiveness of a non-medicated wound dressing on attached and biofilm encased bacteria: laboratory and clinical evidence. J Wound Care 2018;27(3):146-155.