In plastic and reconstructive surgery, treatment strategies of second-degree burns, superficial wounds, burn scars, flaps and chronic wounds aim at reducing infection and improving microcirculation. Although previous studies indicate that Plasma Therapy can accelerate wound healing, only a few studies focused on the elucidation of its mechanisms of action. Therefore, the aim of this study is to evaluate the microcirculatory effects of Plasma Therapy on second-degree burns, superficial wounds, burn scars, flaps and chronic wounds in a human in-vivo setting for the first time.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
240
Plasma Therapy (PlasmaDerm)
Repetitive Plasma Therapy (Repetitive PlasmaDerm)
University of Schleswig-Holstein
Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Change in microcirculation (composite measure)
* capillary blood flow \[arbitrary units AU\] * capillary blood velocity \[AU\] * tissue oxygen saturation \[%\] * relative postcapillary venous filling pressure \[AU\]
Time frame: Baseline and 1 minute post-dose
Change in microcirculation (areolar measure)
* tissue oxygen saturation \[%\] * tissue hemoglobin index
Time frame: Baseline, while and 1 minute post-dose
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