Claims
- 1. A wound dressing comprising a nonwoven fabric consisting of at least 35% by weight of alginate staple fibers, which fabric is substantially free from any adhesive binder or of interfusing of fibers at their crossing points, said fibers being sufficiently entangled that a plot of the fabric's tensile strength vs. basis weight lies above line 12 of FIG. 1 of the drawing when the fabric is dry and lies above line 22 of FIG. 2 when the fabric is saturated with saline water.
- 2. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 wherein the nonwoven fabric has a basis weight of at least 20 g/m.sup.2.
- 3. A wound dressing as defined in claim 2, the fabric of which has a basis weight of from 50 to 180 g/m.sup.2.
- 4. A wound dressing as defined in claim 3, the fabric of which has a basis weight of at least 60 g/m.sup.2 and has sufficient integrity to permit it to be converted into strips as narrow as 5 mm using a continuous slitting process.
- 5. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1, wherein substantially all of the staple alginate fibers of the nonwoven fabric are from 2 to 10 cm in length.
- 6. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 wherein the fabric further comprises reinforcing fibers.
- 7. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 wherein the fabric further comprises chitosan fibers.
- 8. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 and having a highly open structure so that when the dressing is saturated with saline fluids, it is sufficiently translucent in contact with a wound to permit the wound to be inspected without removing the dressing.
- 9. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 and containing at least one therapeutic agent.
- 10. A wound dressing comprising a nonwoven fabric comprising at least 35% by weight of alginate staple fibers, which fabric is substantially free from any adhesive binder or of interfusing of fibers at their crossing points, said fibers being sufficiently entangled that the fabric has a Web Dry Strength of at least 0.01 N/g/m.sup.2 and a Web Wet Strength of at least as herein defined of at least 0.005 N/g/m.sup.2.
- 11. A wound dressing as defined in claim 10 wherein the Web Dry Strength is at least 0.03 N/g/m.sup.2.
- 12. A wound dressing as defined in claim 10 wherein the Web Wet Strength is at least 0.02 N/g/m.sup.2.
- 13. A method of dressing a wound comprising the steps of:
- (a) preparing an alginate wound dressing comprising a nonwoven fabric comprising at least 35% by weight of alginate staple fibers, which fabric is substantially free from any adhesive binder or of interfusing of fibers at their crossing points, said fibers being sufficiently entangled that a plot of the fabric's tensile strength vs. basis weight lies above line 12 of FIG. 1 of the drawing when the fabric is dry and lies above line 22 of FIG. 2 of the drawing when the fabric is saturated with saline water, and
- (b) applying that wound dressing to the wound.
- 14. A method as defined in claim 13 and including prior to step (b) the step of saturating the alginate wound dressing with saline fluid.
- 15. A method as defined in claim 13 and including the step of covering the wound dressing applied in step (b) with a material selected from film dressings, gauze dressings, hydrocolloid dressings, and bandage wraps.
- 16. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 wherein the nonwoven fabric retains measurable saline moisture for at least 6 hours after it is removed from the saline bath, stored on a flat open tray at 25 degrees C. and 70% relative humidity.
- 17. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 wherein the nonwoven fabric comprises at least 50% by weight of alginate fibers.
- 18. A wound dressing as defined in claim 1 wherein the balance of the fabric comprises a fiber selected from the group consisting of rayon, cotton or nylon.
- 19. A wound dressing comprising a nonwoven fabric of layered fiber webs, wherein at least one layer is a predominantly alginate fiber web and one layer is a fiber web that is not predominantly alginate fiber, which fabric is substantially free from any adhesive binder or of interfusing of fibers at their crossing points, said fibers being sufficiently entangled that a plot of the fabric's tensile strength vs. basis weight lies above line 12 of FIG. 1 of the drawing when the fabric is dry and lies above line 22 of FIG. 2 when the fabric is saturated with saline water.
- 20. A wound dressing as defined in claim 19 wherein the layer of predominantly alginate fiber web is more than about 10% by weight of the total fabric.
- 21. A wound dressing as defined in claim 19 wherein the layer of fiber web that is not predominantly alginate fiber is located between two layers of predominantly alginate fiber web.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 07/622,433 filed Dec. 5, 1990 which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 07/484,068 filed Feb. 23, 1990 now abandoned which is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 07/200,711 filed May 31, 1988 now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (17)
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number |
Date |
Country |
WO8002300 |
Oct 1980 |
WOX |
653341 |
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GBX |
1283399 |
Jul 1972 |
GBX |
1394741 |
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Non-Patent Literature Citations (4)
Entry |
R. W. Moncrieff, "Man-made Fibres" (1975) pp. 300-306. |
Kirk-Othmer, Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, vol. 16, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 768-773 (1981). |
Francis C. Zevnik, "Waterjet Entanglement in Perspective", presented at the IMPACT 88 seminar, Florida (Mar. 10, 1988). |
"Fiber Bonding", Pulp and Paper Chemistry and Chemical Technology, 3rd Ed. vol. II, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 915-963. |
Continuations (2)
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Date |
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Parent |
622433 |
Dec 1990 |
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Parent |
200711 |
May 1988 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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484068 |
Feb 1990 |
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