The objective of this study is to assess the comparative utility of topical formulations in hastening the resolution of skin bruising. For each subject, four standard bruises of 7 mm diameter each were created on the bilateral upper inner arms, 5 cm apart, two per arm, using a 595-nm pulsed-dye laser. Randomization was used to assign one topical agent (5% vitamin K, 1% vitamin K and 0.3% retinol, 20% arnica or white petrolatum) to exactly one bruise per subject, which was then treated under occlusion twice a day for 2 weeks. A dermatologist rated bruises in standardized photographs immediately after bruise creation and at week 2.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
16
Topical formation applied to bruise twice daily for 2 weeks.
Topical formation applied to bruise twice daily for 2 weeks.
Topical formation applied to bruise twice daily for 2 weeks.
Topical formation applied to bruise twice daily for 2 weeks.
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Average Bruise Change
Mean change in bruising level detected by dermatologist rater on Visual Analogue Scale at 2 weeks compared with baseline for each of the four agents (Petrolatum USP, Vitamin K and retinol ointment, Vitamin K ointment, Arnica ointment). When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify the bruise severity by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points (0 and 10, 10 being the most bruised).
Time frame: Baseline and 2 weeks
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