Tuesday 11 February 2014

Collagen based product to heal the wound

The wound healing process is a process is a complex series of events that begins at the moment of injury and can continue for a months to several months or may be years. This process has four phases: They are
     ü  blood clotting phase,
     ü  inflammatory phase,
     ü  proliferative phase,
     ü  maturational phase
Collagen the most abundant protein found in the body is the main supportive protein for connective tissue, cartilage, tendon, skin, and bone. There are at least thirteen different types of collagen. Type 1,3,4,5 and 7 are specific for skin.
Collagen plays an integral part during each phase of wound healing and is an excellent hemostatic agent as it absorbs 40-60 times its weight in fluid. Collagen exposed during wound formation activities the clotting phase, when the collagen is native and bioactive, and is responsible for cell signaling that influences the migration of inflammatory cells to the wound bed.
Collagen dressings have been used in various forms for tissue repair and wound healing as it constitutes more than 80% of the structural proteins of the body. Compared to many other modern non-biological dressings, collagen dressings remain a poorly understood and probably underused material. Biodegradable (bio utilized) collagen dressings are derived from animal tissues. These collagendressings maintain a physiologically moist microenvironment that promotes healing and the formation of granulation tissue.
The healing of skin tissue requires the development of a vascularized granular tissue bed, filling of large tissue defects by dermal regeneration, and the restoration of a continuous epidermal keratinocyte layer. Several experimental results suggest that collagen is an ideal material for tissue regeneration compared to other non-biological wound healing materials.
In a wound where the basement membrane has been destroyed, similar to a second or third degree burn, the wound is re-epithelialized from the normal cells in the periphery and from the skin appendages provided the basement is intact. The granulation phase and tissue deposition require nutrients supplied by the capillaries, and failure for this to occur results in a chronically unhealed wound. Fibroblasts differentiate and produce ground substance and then collagen. Many different cytokines are involved in the proliferative phase of wound repair. The steps and the exact mechanism of control have not been elucidated. Some of the cytokines include formation. Epithelialization angiogenesis, granulation tissue formation, and collagen deposition are the principal steps in this anabolic portion of wound healing.
Healicoll can be placed on wounds caused by soft tissue necrosis secondary to radiation, chemical burns or corrosives. The Healicoll is moistened with sterile water or normal saline for six to ten minutes and placed in direct contact with the necrotic tissue. Daily dressing changes are recommended with mechanical debridement of the necrotic tissue to reduce the bioburden of the necrotic tissue and assist with autolysis.
Oxygen only enhances the wound healing activity of collagen when Healicoll applied to wounds that are undergoing treatment with hyperbaric oxygen.
It does not matter which surface of the Healicoll wound dressings is placed against the wound surface. Healicoll must remain in contact with the wound by light pressure to ensure the contact of the wound surface with the collagen to ensure proper healing.
Only areas with skin damage will interact with Healicoll. Any excess collagen can be rinsed away with saline irrigation, so removal of the dressings does not interface with healing granulation tissue nor does it cause a painful experience for the patient. Healicoll is also semi-translucent so that observation of the healing can be accomplished without disturbing the healing tissue.
HEALICOLL ADVANTAGES
The usefulness of Healicoll over any other dressings in the market is well documented for the treatment of pressure ulcers, donor sites, diabetic ulcers, burn treatments and other types of wounds.
With Healicoll, epithelialization occurs even the in the inner areas of the wound site. This did not happen with other collagen preparations used on the same wounds.
Common Benefits of Healicoll over other commercially available collagens in the market are:
     ü  Improved biocompatibility
     ü  Non immunogenicity
     ü  Controlled bioresorbability
     ü  Cell attractability
     ü  Hemostatic ability
     ü  Structural stability
     ü  Target specificity
     The some disadvantages of using human skin allografts that don't apply to Healicoll include:
     ü  Fear of HIV and some other human infections
     ü  Cross linking or use of preservatives that may reduce the bioactivity of the graft
     ü  Biohazardous material disposal considerations
     ü  Immediate availableness is quite tough
     ü  Limited time period
     ü  Possible bacterial contamination

     ü  Many eventually are rejected, making them a temporary instead of permanent wound covering

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