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Lights, fluorescence, action-Influencing wound treatment plans including debridement of bacteria and biofilms. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • High bacterial loads in chronic wounds can lead to increased infection risks, and point-of-care fluorescence imaging can help detect and guide treatment decisions.
  • In a study of 1,000 chronic wounds across 211 US facilities, FL imaging revealed elevated bacterial levels in 70.8% of wounds, while only 29.6% showed signs of infection.
  • Following FL imaging, treatment plans were adjusted in 528 wounds, resulting in changes such as more debridement, hygiene improvements, and new therapies, indicating that this imaging technology enhances bacterial infection management.

Article Abstract

High bacterial loads within chronic wounds increase the risk of infection and complication. Detection and localization of bacterial loads through point-of-care fluorescence (FL) imaging can objectively inform and support bacterial treatment decisions. This single time-point, retrospective analysis describes the treatment decisions made on 1000 chronic wounds (DFUs, VLUs, PIs, surgical wounds, burns, and others) at 211 wound-care facilities across 36 US states. Clinical assessment findings and treatment plans derived from them, as well as subsequent FL-imaging (MolecuLight®) findings and any associated treatment plan changes, were recorded for analysis. FL signals indicating elevated bacterial loads were observed in 701 wounds (70.8%), while only 293 (29.6%) showed signs/symptoms of infection. After FL-imaging, treatment plans changed in 528 wounds as follows: more extensive debridement (18.7%), more extensive hygiene (17.2%), FL-targeted debridement (17.2%), new topical therapies (10.1%), new systemic antibiotic prescriptions (9.0%), FL-guided sampling for microbiological analysis (6.2%), and changes in dressing selection (3.2%). These real-world findings of asymptomatic bacterial load/biofilm incidence, and of the frequent treatment plan changes post-imaging, are in accordance with clinical trial findings using this technology. These data, from a range of wound types, facilities, and clinician skill sets, suggest that point-of-care FL-imaging information improves bacterial infection management.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10502265PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/iwj.14208DOI Listing

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