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Volume 89, Issue 3, Pages 611-626 (June 2009)


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The Science of Wound Bed Preparation

Jaymie Panuncialman, MDa, Vincent Falanga, MD, FACPabCorresponding Author Informationemail address

The concept of wound bed preparation (WBP) heralded a new era in terms of how we treat wounds. It emphasized the difference between acute and chronic wounds, and it cemented the idea that the processes involved in the healing of acute wounds do not apply completely to the healing of chronic wounds. The arbitrary division of the normal healing process into the phases of hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and maturation addresses the events in acute wound healing. We have realized that the impediments to healing in chronic wounds lead to a failure to progress through these phases and are independent factors that make the chronic wound a much more complex condition. A major advance in resolving or addressing the chronic wound has been the concept of WBP. WBP allows us to address the problems of wound healing individually the presence of necrotic tissue, hypoxia, high bacterial burden, corrupt matrix, and senescent cells within the wound bed. In WBP we can optimize our therapeutic agents to accelerate endogenous healing or to increase the effectiveness of advanced therapies.

a Department of Dermatology and Skin Surgery, Roger Williams Medical Center, Providence, RI, USA

b Department of Dermatology and Biochemistry, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding address. Department of Dermatology, Roger Williams Medical Center, 50 Maude Street, Providence, RI 02908.

 This article originally appeared in the October 2007 issue of Clinics in Plastic Surgery.

 This study was funded by National Institutes of Health grants (DK067836 and P20RR018757) and the Wound Biotechnology Foundation.

PII: S0039-6109(09)00043-7

doi:10.1016/j.suc.2009.03.009


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