From the Journals

Nitric oxide–generating dressing holds promise for diabetic foot ulcers


 

FROM WOUND REPAIR AND REGENERATION


“The critical factors that delay the healing of diabetic foot ulcers are ischemia and infection,” Dr. Edmonds said. “Nitric oxide plays a crucial role in maintaining the microvascular supply and infection control in the skin, and its absence in diabetes contributes to poor ulcer healing. EDX110 generates a sustained release of nitric oxide which can treat both infection and ischemia simultaneously.”

Dr. Michael E. Edmonds
Researchers randomly assigned patients with chronic DFUs – including some with infections – to a control group (n = 73) or a treatment group that received the experimental dressing (n = 75). The study protocol was changed partway through to allow patients with DFUs of at least 14 days duration to participate instead of just those with DFUs in place for at least 6 weeks.

The average age of patients in both groups was 59 years, and males made up 82%-87% of the total. Some had more than 1 ulcer.

All patients received standard DFU care for their institution with the exception of members of the treatment group, who were given the EDX110 dressing. Participants were treated for 12 weeks or until their ulcers healed followed by a 12-week follow-up period.

Pages

Recommended Reading

You, Me, and Your A1C
Clinician Reviews
Numb Toes and Other Woes: Diabetic Peripheral and Autonomic Neuropathies
Clinician Reviews
Abstract: Glyburide Versus Metformin and Their Combination for the Treatment of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus: A Randomized Controlled Study
Clinician Reviews
The Gut Microbiome in Type 2 Diabetes
Clinician Reviews
NASH rapidly overtaking hepatitis C as cause of liver cancer
Clinician Reviews
Taking the Bite Out of Nutrition
Clinician Reviews
Bloating. Flatulence. Think SIBO
Clinician Reviews
DPP-4 inhibitors increase IBD risk in diabetes
Clinician Reviews
Cardiovascular risk in type 2 diabetes: Patients are often clueless
Clinician Reviews
‘Fast food swamps’ linked to type 1 diabetes
Clinician Reviews