1.Hydrosurgery is Effective for Debridement of Diabetic Foot Wounds.
Choon Chiet HONG ; Aziz NATHER ; Jamie K X LEE ; Hai Tong MAO
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2014;43(8):395-399
INTRODUCTIONDiabetic foot wounds are serious complications of diabetes mellitus. Surgical debridement is a very important part of the management of diabetic wounds. Sharp debridement using the scalpel is normally performed. Versajet II hydrosurgery system is an alternative technique for debridement. To our knowledge, this is the fi rst study conducted to evaluate the use of hydrosurgery debridement for diabetic foot wounds.
MATERIALS AND METHODSThis pilot study included 15 consecutive patients with diabetic foot wounds who were admitted to the National University Hospital (NUH) and were managed by the Diabetic Foot Team from June 2012 to December 2012. All wounds underwent hydrosurgery debridement. Patients' demographic details, clinical details on wound assessments, and outcome were recorded and analysed.
RESULTSThe Versajet II hydrosurgery system was found to show some advantages over standard surgical scalpel debridement. It allowed adequate debridement whilst preserving more viable tissue to promote rapid healing. It could be manoeuvred over complex wound terrain. The time required for debridement was short--an average of 9.5 minutes. Good wound healing was achieved in all 15 cases. Only 1 Versajet debridement was required in 13 cases and 2 required an extra debridement. Twelve wounds were healed by split thickness skin grafting (STSG) and 3 wounds by secondary healing. Two of the STSG were infected but they were subsequently healed by dressings via secondary healing.
CONCLUSIONAlthough good wound healing was achieved in all 15 cases, further study that uses a larger cohort and a randomised controlled trial is required to fully evaluate the effectiveness, or otherwise, of the Versajet II hydrosurgery system for the debridement of diabetic foot wounds.
Adult ; Aged ; Debridement ; methods ; Diabetic Foot ; surgery ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Pilot Projects ; Prospective Studies ; Treatment Outcome ; Water ; Wound Healing