A clinical evaluation of Urgotul to treat acute and chronic wounds
- 1 January 2004
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Mark Allen Group in British Journal of Nursing
- Vol. 13 (2) , 105-109
- https://doi.org/10.12968/bjon.2004.13.2.12042
Abstract
This article describes the first UK clinical open study of Urgotul®, a new dressing, in the management of acute and chronic wounds. A single-centre, qualitative, descriptive, non-comparative study was carried out to evaluate the tolerance, acceptability and efficacy of Urgotul® in practice. Urgotul® comprises a new concept in wound management: lipido-colloid technology. It is a class IIb medical device and takes the form of a non-occlusive, thin-sheet, lipido-colloid dressing. Twenty-two out of 27 hospital inpatients who were selected by the tissue viability nurse and vascular nurse completed the study. Informed written consent was obtained before inclusion and photography of the wounds. Wounds were photographed and traced on entry, at each dressing change and on exit. The clinical report forms were completed weekly until wounds healed, or up to a maximum of 4 weeks. Patient and nurse acceptability was documented weekly and on exit from the study. The results were very positive regarding ease of application, conformability and non-adherence, absence of trauma, pain and bleeding on removal, with minimal maceration of the surrounding skin and odour. The study involved a limited sample of patients but demonstrated good efficacy, tolerance and acceptability of the dressing in a wide range of acute and chronic wounds.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Urgotul™: alternative to conventional non-adherence dressingsBritish Journal of Nursing, 2002
- Formation of the Scab and the Rate of Epithelization of Superficial Wounds in the Skin of the Young Domestic PigNature, 1962