The present invention relates to medical treatments and management for wounds, and more specifically to a smart wound management system.
The clinical management of wounds is one of the most difficult challenges to the medical community today.
Chronic non-healing wounds create significant healthcare challenges that affect many people. Although chronic wounds are locked in a persisting inflamed state, they are dynamic and proper therapy requires identifying abnormalities, administering appropriate drugs and growth factors, and modulating the environment's conditions.
Severe wounds can extend fully through soft tissue and involve exposed bone. Severe wounds can also involve undermining of surrounding tissue with significant erosion occurring underneath the outwardly visible wound margins. Significant sinus tract can radiate out from the wound's epicenter with the narrow openings or passageways of the sinus tracts extending underneath the skin in any direction through soft tissue, possibly resulting in dead space with the potential for abscess formation. Wounds with undermining usually have significant drainage, requiring standard dressing changes ranging from daily dressing changes, dressing changes a few times per week or even a few times per day to several times per week, depending on wound drainage rate, healing rate, any infections, etc. These can be some of the most difficult and costly wounds to manage, as patients are often bed ridden and are very difficult to move.
Common types of wound care used widely negative pressure therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, compression therapy and electric pulse therapy.
In negative pressure therapy, a vacuum seal is created using special airtight and watertight foam dressings and gauze are used around the wound to maintain a vacuum seal. A vacuum pump is then used intermittently or continuously over the course of several days to draws out fluids, exudates, and infectious materials from the wound. Negative pressure therapy is used, e.g., in large chronic persistent wounds and acute complicated wounds. While this type of wound therapy treatment is considered effective, there is a risk of hemorrhaging in patients with bleeding issues or when caregivers do not receive proper training on how to operate the device.
In hyperbaric oxygen therapy, patients are placed in a chamber that exposes the body to a 100% oxygen environment at high pressure. Since wounds need oxygen to heal, it is thought that this type of wound therapy can speed the healing process. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is used for patients with large or full body wounds such as burn victims.
Compression therapy consists of applying a type of elastic device, mainly on the limbs, to exert a controlled pressure on them. By compressing the limbs or other body regions, the medical compression device squeezes the vein walls together, thereby improving overall circulation and supporting blood flow back towards the heart. Compression therapy can also help to reduce swelling and formation of edema Compression stockings work by applying gentle pressure to the ankles and calf muscles which cause vein walls to straighten and improve circulation. Compression therapy is effective for venous ulcers which are wounds on the leg caused by abnormal vein function because it allows the veins to work correctly. Electric pulse therapy is the application of electrical current through electrodes placed on the skin either near or directly on the wound. When the epithelial layers of the skin are injured, the body's naturally-occurring electrical current is disrupted. It is thought that by providing electrical stimulation, a wound's healing process will be accelerated by imitating the body's electrical current. Thus, electrical stimulation is a unique wound treatment option that may help to heal chronic wounds, reduce infection, increase blood flow, and accelerate the wound healing process.
The common denominator is that none of these methods is applicable for all types of wounds as each method is very specific to the type of the wound.
Wound healing is a complex physiological process affected by numerous intrinsic and extrinsic factors. For improved wound care, physiological parameters at the wound site can be monitored. Through evaluation of these parameters, a clinician can determine the wound healing state and whether the wound has developed an infection or would benefit from wound care such as the negative pressure therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, compression therapy or electric pulse therapy mentioned above. Therapeutics such as medications can be administered in response to a change in the physiologic parameters or other therapeutics, such as electrical stimuli, can be administered to enhance tissue regeneration.
A new smart sensor system could improve clinical efficacy and e.g., reduce the number of dressing changes required during wound management by monitoring and enhancing the healing rates. Wound healing is a complex physiological process affected by numerous intrinsic and extrinsic factors which can be monitored. For example, for improved wound care, physiological parameters such as pH, temperature, moisture level and microbial activity at the wound site can be monitored.
For a wound to heal, the pH preferably must come down from alkaline (7.15-8.9) to neutral (7) to acidic (4-5.5). A higher pH is correlated to infection and increased microbial activity. An acidic wound dressing is helpful in enhancing the wound healing rate.
Normal skin temperature is between 98.4° F. and 99.4° F. For a healing wound that is not infected, skin temperature will be between 99.4° F. and 100.4° F. and for a wound with an infection, the temperature can be between 100.4° F. and 105.6° F., with higher temperature correlated to more infection and higher microbial activity. For a wound to heal, the skin temperature must come down to normal (98.4-99.4 F).
A wound site can vary between extremely dry, dry, normal, wet and sometime oily, with absolute values or ranges can depend not only on the wound site, wound size and type of wound but also on the location of the sensor, the distance between sensors, the current, and the frequency. The amount of moisture at the wound the site should be close to that of the normal skin for faster healing and therefore it is beneficial to optimize moisture levels within a healing wound. Too little moisture can result in dry wound dressings causing excessive pain on removal and a slowed rate of wound closure. An excessively moist wound can result in tissue edema, maceration, moisture-associated skin damage, and a slower rate of wound resolution.
Wound healing can also be predicted based on the rate of silver nanoparticles depletion, with the rate of silver nanoparticle depletion being proportional to bacterial activity at wound site. Controlled release of silver nanoparticles is achieved based on the pH value measurement and the applied electric potential. Higher rate of silver nanoparticles depletion is correlated to higher bacterial activity and infection. Lower rate of silver nanoparticles depletion is correlated with normal wound healing and less bacterial activity. Absolute values or range can depend on sensor characterization, the amount of silver nanoparticles in sensors during application to determine a baseline value, supporting instrumentation, etc. Depletion of silver nanoparticles can be measured as percentage depletion of the starting silver nanoparticles amount with respect to time.
Wounds also need oxygen to heal. Detection of oxygen level at a wound site can be beneficial, with subsequent infusion of oxygen through e.g., hypobaric oxygen chamber therapy increasing the rate of wound healing.
Biofouling is a major issue in the process of wound management and healing, with more than 90% of chronic wounds affected by biofilms. Biofilms and biofouling are caused by the formation of a thick slimy layer secreted by a community of bacteria which forms a biofilm layer between the wound and the bandage, e.g., an adhesive bandage, such as Band-Aid Adhesive Bandage®, and can affect the functionality of the bandage. The biofilms are not visible to the naked eye and are impenetrable by antibiotics, antiseptics, antimicrobials, or antibodies. Because of these issues, the bacterial colony at the wound site can begin to interact with each other, making the bacteria more resistant to treatment. A conventional bandage is not able to treat this issue, which could continue to worsen due to continuous increase of resistance to treatments by the bacteria. Biofilms can then lead to biofouling, which can degrade the functionality of the bandage.
Antibiofilm agents are not antibiotics, but affect biofilm by disrupting quorum sensing, degrading extracellular polymeric substances, blocking attachments, and many other antibiofilm strategies. Antibiofilm agents allow antibiotics to be more effective. Methods such as laser, ultrasound, acoustic, electrical pulses and currents, material manipulation and alterations, and other methods can physically disrupt biofilms. Altering bacterial migration could be a successful approach for augmenting the natural wound-healing process. These methods have the possibility of targeting biofilm cells and sparing the host cells.
Abnormal wound-site changes can be an early predictor of infection. Besides, on-demand therapy is another requisite for wound management that releases the therapeutic drugs according to wound needs. Compared with the traditional methods for infection methods, the described system provides improved solutions. It is more sensitive, intuitive, and accurate.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a bandage system for wounds capable of collecting data which can then be used for personalized wound care based on demographic, nutrition, type of wound, wound site, underlying conditions, co-morbidities, existing preconditions, and the like. Also, the type of metrics measured will be useful to monitor and treat all kinds of wounds.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a bandage system for wounds capable of collecting data and also of treating wounds using personalized wound care based on parameters such as demographic, nutrition, type of wound, wound site, underlying conditions, co-morbidities, existing preconditions, and the like. Also, the type of metrics measured will be useful to monitor and treat all kinds of wounds.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a bandage system for wounds capable of collecting data and/or of treating wounds using personalized wound care wherein the data includes physiologic parameters such as pH, temperature, moisture level and microbial activity.
It is additionally an object of the present invention to provide a method of collecting and assessing data from wounds to be used for personalized wound care. It is a further object of the present invention for the method to include treatment of the wounds based on the assessment of the data.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, an integrated system for assessing a wound is provided.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, an integrated system for assessing and treating a wound is provided.
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the system may detect, process and report various wound parameters.
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the system may make treatment determinations based on these findings.
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the system may detect one or more physiological values from the wound of the patient. In certain preferred embodiments, the data is physiologic data. In preferred embodiments the physiologic data includes pH, temperature, moisture level and microbial activity
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the system may compare one or more detected physiological values to predetermined physiological values in order to obtain a comparison result in real time.
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the physiological values may be detected by one or more sensors and electronics.
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the sensor(s) may be nanostructured working electrode (WE) and counter electrode (CE), and silver-silver chloride reference electrode (RE).
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the sensor(s) may be an array connected to an electronics module that acquires sensor signals, sends electrical stimuli and communicates wirelessly to mobile device at programmable time intervals.
In accordance with another embodiment of present invention, the system may compute a composite score for wound healing and to determine the frequency and magnitude of delivery of therapeutics.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, the system may include wound treatment components, sensing components for sensing one or more values of one or more physiological parameters of the wound, application components for applying one or more parameters to the wound site, analyzing mechanism for analyzing the values of the one or more physiological parameters so as to obtain an assessment of the wound exudate, and providing means for providing treatment guidelines based on the assessment, in which the wound treatment, sensing, analyzing, and applying means are integrated.
In accordance with various embodiments of the present invention a system for assessing the wound of a patient is described. The system may detect, process and report various wound parameters. The system may make treatment determinations based on these findings. The system may detect one or more physiological values from the wound of the patient. The system may compare one or more detected physiological values to predetermined physiological values in order to obtain a comparison result in real time. The physiological values may be detected by one or more sensors and electronics. The sensors may be nanostructured working electrode (WE) and counter electrode (CE), and silver-silver chloride reference electrode (RE). The sensor(s) may be an array connected to the electronics module that acquires sensor signals, sends electrical stimuli and communicates wirelessly to mobile device at programmable time intervals. The system may compute a composite score for wound healing and to determine the frequency and magnitude of delivery of therapeutics. Suitable sensors for use in the present invention are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/916,843, the entire disclosures of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Sensor arrays for multiparameter monitoring (e.g., moisture, temperature, pH, silver depletion due to high microbial activity, oxygen content) are described herein. Each parameter is detected by a dedicated set of nanostructured working electrode (WE) and counter electrode (CE), and silver-silver chloride reference electrode (RE). The inter-digitated working electrode (WE) and counter electrode (CE) are nanostructured electrodes. The reference electrode (RE) is a silver-silver chloride printed electrode. The plurality of electrodes is covered with a hydrogel and a thermosensitive hydrogel-drug/buffer formulation. For example, a N-isopropyl acrylamide (NIPA, C6H11NO) based thermosensitive polymer in combination with chitosan for adhesion can be used as hydrogel. A hydrogel conformal film on top of the nanosensor surface or a hydrogel film stacked with the nanosensor can provide moisture for the skin to make it moist for better nanosensor-skin contact. The electrical interface with the skin is still formed by the nanostructures, unlike the gel-based electrodes that rely on the wet chemistry of the salts in the gel to make the electrical interface with the skin.
An example of a nanosensor hydrogel stack on a bandage of the present invention is shown in
The cloth substrate is coated with thermosensitive hydrogel. In certain embodiments of the present invention, the thermosensitive hydrogel (2) can be embedded with a drug such as an antibiofilm agent and/or an antibiotic such as amoxicillin-clavulanate, cephalexin, clindamycin, dicloxacillin, doxycycline and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. In certain embodiments, there are heating elements (3) sandwiched between the hydrogel and the cloth substrate or adhesive bandage. The heating elements (3) can be used to trigger drug release.
The cloth based nanosensors with the hydrogel stack is fabricated in patterns of inter-digitated electrode (IDT/IDE) pairs (14) that function as working electrode (WE) and counter electrode (CE) as shown in
The layer of nanosensor array has a layer of electrical connection lines that consist of a grid of dedicated connections lines (1f) made of electrically conductive wires or printed conductive lines that are capable of relaying signals of the order of micro-volts or milli-volts and deliver electrical current that between about 1 and about 5 Volts, less than about 1 mA. The electrical connection lines are also connected to a network of printed lines of heat elements (3) that are made of high resistance inks such as inks with carbon fillers or fine wires that have high resistance such as ceramic wires with positive temperature coefficient. The electrical connection line network converges to a connector break out circuit (4). This circuit has a connector mounted on it that is used to connect the electronics module (16) to the bandage system (15). The network of printed lines of heating element (3) is embedded between a layer of thermosensitive hydrogel (2) and the adhesive bandage (1a) and sensor electronics (1). The hydrogel is functionalized with therapeutic chemical compounds such as antiseptic agents, buffer stabilized moisture (or saline). The network of printed lines of heating element (3) is designed to achieve temperatures above the phase transition temperature of the hydrogel to trigger the release of therapeutic chemical compounds.
The nanosensor signal acquisition and triggering heating element network for controlled release of therapeutic chemical compounds is managed by the electronics module (16) that is connected to the nanosensor and heating element network through a connector on the far side (away from the skin) of the bandage.
As shown in
On the nanosensor hydrogel stack (8) of
This hydrogel-nanosensor stack forms a good nanosensor-skin contact by introduction of moisture at the nanosensor-skin interface, which is triggered immediately after the stack comes in contact with skin and detects skin temperature. The stack retains moisture at room temperature and can be recharged when it comes in contact with a moisture source.
Interdigitated electrodes (IDE): Interdigitated electrodes (IDE) (14) as shown in
Thermosensitive hydrogels formulation: Several gels have the characteristic of undergoing a discontinuous volume change upon changes in temperature and are classified as Thermosensitive Hydrogels. This phenomenon is due to the phase transition in the hydrogel at the designated temperature, and at this phase transition temperature (PTT) the swelling ratio of the hydrogel undergoes a sudden change.
There are various hydrogels which exhibit thermosensitive behavior. However, acrylamides and substituted acrylamides show a clearly defined phase transition temperature ranging between about 17 to about 60° C. In particular, N-isopropyl acrylamide (NIPA, C6H11NO) copolymerized with N,N′ methylene bis acrylamide (BIS, C7H10N2O2) gives the phase transition temperature of 33° C. which is useful for skin contact application.
Hydrogels can be cationic, anionic or neutral in nature and their hydrophilicity is due to the presence of —NH2, —COOH, —OH, —CONH2 groups which leads to their swelling in the presence of water.
Hydrogel synthesis: Exemplary hydrogels were synthesized based on N, isopropyl acrylamide (NIPA) as their phase transition temperature was in the range of 33−37° C. N, N′ methylene bis acrylamide (BIS) was used as a crosslinking agent. Ammonium per sulfate (APS) was used as a Redox initiator and Sodium meta bi sulfite (SMBS) as an accelerator. All reactants were dissolved in deionized water and the reaction was carried out under Nitrogen blanket at 5° C. for 12 hrs.
—(C6H12NO)—X1+—(C7H10N2O2)—X2→APA,SMBSNIPA Hydrogel
The NIPA-BIS hydrogel can be prepared in deionized water by adding 6 to 8 weight % NIPA and 1 to 2 weight % BIS then purging with Nitrogen. After this a mix of 2 to 4 weight % Ammonium per sulfate (initiator) and Sodium Meta BiSulfite (accelerator) in deionized water was added to the above prepared solution and the solution was again purged with Nitrogen. The solution was kept in an airtight container at 5° C. for 12 hours.
Sensor fabrication: The nanosensor fabrication involves steps of embedding polymer nanofibers into a matrix polymer to form a yarn; dissolving the matrix polymer to expose the polymer nanofibers; and coating the polymer nanofibers in a film. The yarn can be a micro denier yarn. The micro denier yarn can have a helical structure. The method can further include a step of imparting an electrostatic charge to the yarn prior to dissolving the matrix polymer. The polymer nanofibers can be made of a polymer material selected from the group consisting of polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate or polybutylene terephthalate. The polymer nanofibers can be made of a polyester. The polymer nanofibers can be made of a polyurethane. The matrix polymer can be made of a material selected from the group consisting of polystyrene, polyvinyl alcohol, ethylene vinyl alcohol, polyacrylamide or poly lactic acid. The matrix polymer can be made of a polyethylene terephthalate modified with sulfonated isocyanate. The film can be a conductive material selected from the group consisting of silver, gold, platinum, polyaniline, polypyrrole, poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene). The film can be a metal oxide film. The film can be a piezoelectric material film.
A method for manufacturing of hybrid nanostructured textile sensors (
In a different variation of this method, a single component micro denier yarn of 10-20 μm diameter is used for making microsensors. The method includes cutting of fibers to a length of from about 0.1 to about 1.5 mm; activating the cut microfibers in a reactor; drying the activated microfibers; applying an adhesive to a conductive fabric; depositing the activated microfibers as vertically standing nanofibers, the depositing step including performing an electrostatic and/or pneumatic assisted deposition process using a high strength electrostatic field of 2 kV/cm-10 kV/cm to electrostatically charge the activated microfibers and deposit the electrostatically charged activated microfibers as vertically standing nanofibers; curing the conductive fabric containing the vertically standing microfibers; and electroless plating the vertically standing microfibers, the electroless plating including coating the microfiber surface with a conductive material, and drying the conductive material to form a conductive film on the microfibers, and annealing the conductive film coated microfibers.
A more detailed description of the process can be found in patents U.S. Pat. No. 10,131,993 B2 “Large Scale Manufacturing of Hybrid Nanostructured Textile Sensors,” and U.S. Pat. No. 10,231,623 B2 “Roll-to-roll Printing Process for Manufacturing a Wireless Nanosensor,” the entire disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Sensor array functionality: The inter-digitated nanosensor stack with hydrogel can be used as pH probe. All the electrodes are covered with hydrogel, but only the working electrode has the thermosensitive hydrogel combined with salt solution such as potassium chloride. The sensor(s) are able to differentiate between wound surface and skin surface through detecting the pH i.e., normal skin has a pH between 4 and 5.5, a wound has a pH between 7.15 and 8.9, blood has a pH between 7.35 and 7.45.
Thermoelectric coated nanosensors on the inter-digitated electrodes are used to detect change in temperature. Thermoelectric material, such as zinc oxide, is conformally coated on the nanostructured sensor surface to detect change in temperature based on change in electric current between working and counter electrode. Ideally, the dressing should be able to maintain an optimal temperature (from about 98.4° F. to about 99.4° F.) to enhance healing rate. Moisture level is detected by measuring impedance on the wound surface. A current of up to 5 mA at frequency of between about 1100 kHz is passed between a pair of nanostructured electrodes and voltage is measured across another pair of nanostructured electrodes. Electrical potential (AC) from a few micro amps to about 10 mA at frequency range in about 1-100 Hz is passed between a pair of nanostructured electrodes. The current also passes through wound tissue to enhance wound healing rates. This amplitude and frequency of current delivered from the sensor array to the wound will depend on the other metrics measured. Electric potential can intermittently be applied during measurements performed several times during the day. Alternately, depending on the severity/type of the wound, electric potential can be applied to the wound site for longer periods continuously. Silver depletion is measured as change in impedance through nanostructured inter-digitated sensor pair coated with silver nanoparticle-hydrogel layer. These sensors with large surface area which will enhance the measurement capability.
Oxygen content at the wound site is measured by Inter-digitated electrodes and surface acoustic waves in the range of 5 to 100.
Two different formulations of the hydrogel are used with thermo sensitivity of the gel differing by at least 5° C. The hydrogels can be embedded with drugs that have anti-microbial and/or wound healing properties. The hydrogel with lower temperature response releases the drug upon being triggered by body heat when the hydrogel comes in contact with the wound site. Further drug delivery can be triggered by applied heat (created by inter-digitated electrode pair by applying voltage across the electrode). The higher temperature response gel will only be activated if infection is detected (temperature increase, moisture build, abnormal pH, silver depletion using impedance scan).
Biofilms and biofouling formation is prevented as the sensor and electronics module (16) operates in a feedback loop, where the device learns about the current state of the wound and administers the necessary therapeutic modality. This feedback loop operates based on the ingested sensor data that indicates the wound status and bacterial activity. Inducing electrotactic behavior through the application of physiologically safe currents is one possible strategy in continuously keeping the bandage resistant to biofilms throughout the wound healing process. This prevents overall bacterial resistance, thereby preventing biofilms and biofouling. Electric pulse can be used to manipulate bacterial electrotaxis without using chemicals or antimicrobials. While the electric pulse solution decreases bacterial cellular velocity and growth, it does not affect the integrity of normal cells. The amount of current used will be less than 10 mA, which is safe for normal cells and human body. Similarly, electric pulse at wound sites can introduce the release of cytokines and prostaglandins which attracts the macrophages to the site, leading to bacterial death.
An example of a design of the electronics module is shown in
The electronics module can also supply electric pulse and/or potential to the sensors in the range of 0.001-100 kHz and up to 50 mA. A frontend circuit can have multiple amplifiers, filters, potentiostat circuits to measure a plurality of signals from a combination of multiple sensors. The electronics module has a signal coprocessor unit (16) that is used for signal processing and for additional functions that complement the processing unit. This signal coprocessor unit (25) is connected to the control and processing unit (13) where the executable code is installed. An Inertial Measurement Unit (24) is connected to the control and processing unit (22) for movement tracking. The electronics module also has indicators and/or alarms (27), for status updates. The power supply and management block (28) of the electronics module provides the proper voltages and power to each circuit and the sensors from a battery to power up the electronics module. A wireless module (23) enables the electronics module (16) to communicate with the smart phone and web portal. Storage (26) such as a SD card or flash memory is used to store data.
As shown in
The smart phone (20) includes a microcontroller or microprocessor and a storage medium that contains microcontroller or microprocessor executable code 201. The code 201 can perform the functions related to the command and interface functions shown in
The code in 201 has access to local storage available in the smart device 202. The code in 201 can further inquire the operating system in smart device (20) regarding the availability of an internet connection that will allow communication to web services 203. The code in 201 further communicates with a user interface and data managing software module 204. The interfaces between the patient or end user and the smart device are implemented by this module.
The Web server/portal (30) is implemented as two services that work in tandem, in an asynchronous manner. The services Application Programming Interface (API) 303 are responsible for collecting the data acquired by the Electronics module (10), received either directly from the Electronics module 101 or through the smart device software module 201. The API 303 routes the data to a secure cloud storage database that is capable of auto-scaling 301 to meet increased demands as needed. As soon as new data files are available in Scalable File Storage 301, a web server app hosted in 305 processes the data files. The processing in 305 may include, but is not limited to the following:
After the data files have been processed by 305, the resulting meta-data, features or parameters are stored in database 304. The databases 301 and 304 may be combined in a single database in a manner that is known to any person skilled in database management systems.
The web portal front end 302 is responsible for the management of the processed data and generating a user interface wherein the data is presented in a human readable form to a physician. The web portal front end 302 accesses the data that has been processed by 305 through the database services in 303. Apart from receiving the data collected by the device, the web portal can also ingest data including, but not limited to height of the patient, a weight of the patient, a gender of the patient, an age of the patient, a medical history and physical examination records of the patient, a medical status of the patient, a body mass index (BMI) of the patient, an ethnicity of the patient, a medical prescription history of the patient, a medical prescription status of the patient, types of medical treatments for the wound received by the patient, types of medical treatments for health issues and insurance or claims information previously received by the patient, diet information for the patient, psychological history of the patient, and a genetic indicator of the patient, biomarkers of the patient along with other EMR information.
The overall operation of the Smartphone Mobile App (
The data collection process is event-driven and triggered by the electronics module with two messages send to the smart device:
The Data flow diagram depicts the state machine that implements the event driven querying operation between the Smartphone App and the electronics module, and between the smartphone app the Web Server/portal.
More specifically 205 relates to the test or recording setup process that takes place in the electronics module. The steps include:
Similarly, (206) relates to the test initiation process that take place in the Electronics Module and the App. The steps include:
Likewise, (208) relates to starting/restarting the App. The steps include:
As shown in
In the preceding specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments and examples thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the claims that follow. The specification and drawings are accordingly to be regarded in an illustrative manner rather than a restrictive sense.
Obvious variants of the disclosed embodiments are within the scope of the description and the claims that follow.
All references cited herein, as well as text appearing in the figures and tables, are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes to the same extent as if each were so individually denoted.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 63/174,721, filed Apr. 14, 2021, entitled Smart Wound Management System, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63174721 | Apr 2021 | US |