This invention relates to a wound treatment therapy, and in particular a wound treatment methodology that deactivates pathogenic microorganisms without disrupting cell walls or building antibiotic resistance.
In wound care treatment, it is desirable to both deactivate pathogenic microorganisms within the wound environment and physically remove those deactivated microorganisms, as well as, other harmful toxins, from the wound environment. Antibiotics and other drugs are useful in destroying bacteria and other pathogens, but their operation disrupts the cell walls of the microorganisms, releasing harmful enzymes and other toxins into the wound environment. Without a mechanism for their physical removal from the wound environment, such harmful enzymes and toxins can result in cytotoxicity.
It is also known that when planktonic, free floating, individual microorganisms, like bacteria, attach to a surface and gather in groups within a wound environment and else where, they produce an extra-cellular matrix called a biofilm. Biofilms are held together and protected by a matrix of excreted polymeric compounds called EPS (exopolysacchride). Biofilms provide a protective environment for microorganisms that exist within the biofilm mass and a level of immunity from antibiotic treatments, except in doses that would be fatal to the patient. Consequently, biofilm microorganisms are not affected by the body's own infection-resistance mechanisms. In addition, bacterial bioflms may impair cutaneous wound healing and reduce topical antibacterial efficiency in healing or treating infected skin wounds.
Hypochlorous acid (HOCI) is the active component found in our own immune system's natural defense against infection, and thus kills bacteria, fungi and viruses without creating mechanisms for drug resistance. Hypochlorous acid compounds can be a safe, fast acting, broad spectrum antimicrobial, for topical application, effective against all groups of hydrophobic, hydrophilic, gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, and yeast, including pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and multi-drug resistant organisms like methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE). In addition, hypochlorous acid compounds rapidly penetrate and disrupt biofilm and eradicate the pathogens, the major factor that inhibits wound healing. Unlike most antibiotics, which can take many hours to work, hypochlorous acid compounds, even at small doses, can help eradicate bacteria, fungi and viruses in minutes. When applied topically within a wound environment, hypochlorous acid compounds immediately disrupt and eradicate the bio-film, which surrounds and deactivates a broad spectrum of pathogenic microorganisms. Hypochlorous acid generally controls the tissue bacterial bio-burden without inhibiting the wound healing process and is also commonly associated with improved wound closure.
Hydrophobic wound dressings, such as the ones described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,617,326 and available from Abigo Medical AB under the Sorbact® brand dressings, have proven effective against hydrophobic microorganisms. Hydrophobic wound dressings, such as Sorbact, generally consist of a cellulose acetate fabric treated with an application of dioctadecyl carbamoyl chloride DACC of AKD, which creates a covalent bond between the materials. The mechanism of action for such hydrophobic wound dressings is based upon the physical effect of hydrophobic interaction, whereby water repellant substances bind together in an aqueous environment. Since most pathogenic microorganisms are hydrophobic, they bind to the dressing and are inactivated and removed from the wound with the dressing change. In addition, hydrophobic wound dressing can prevent the formation of biofilm, but do not destroy existing biofilm matrix.
The wound treatment therapy of this invention deactivates pathogenic microorganisms within the wound environment without disrupting the cell walls, which can release harmful enzymes and other toxins into the wound environment. The wound treatment therapy of this invention combines the application of stabilized hypochlorous acid compound with the application of a hydrophobic wound dressing. The application of hypochlorous acid provides the initial anti-microbial agents, which disrupt and eradicate biofilm, as well as, deactivating harmful pathogenic organisms within the wound environment. The application of the hydrophobic wound dressing, which is designed to bind harmful hydrophobic microorganisms and toxins, provides a mechanical vehicle for physically removing neutralized hydrophobic microorganisms form the wound environment with each dressing change. By combining the application of a hypochlorous acid compound with the application of a hydrophobic wound dressing to a wound environment, the natural antimicrobial actions and effects of both treatments are enhanced.
The above described features and advantages, as well as others, will become more readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art by reference to the following detailed description and accompanying drawings.
The present invention may take form in various system and method components and arrangement of system and method components. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating exemplary embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention. The drawings illustrate the present invention, in which:
Referring now to the drawings,
As shown in both examples, the wound treatment therapy consists of topically applying hypochlorous acid to the wound environment and applying a hydrophobic wound dressing to facilitate for continued and sustained cell growth. The topical application of hypochlorous acid immediately disrupts and eradicates biofilm and deactivates pathogenic microorganisms within the wound environment. The application of the hydrophobic wound dressing binds the deactivated hydrophobic microorganisms and other toxins within the dressing itself, so that upon removal of the hydrophobic wound dressing microorganisms and toxins are removed. The combination of the application of hypochlorous acid compounds and hydrophobic wound dressings enhances and prolongs the other's therapeutic properties. In addition, the wound treatment therapy of this invention provides anti-microbial treatment without disrupting the cell walls of the microbes, which eliminates the harmful effects of a lysing pathogens within the wound environment.
The wound treatment therapy of this invention may include in certain applications the use of negative pressure wound therapy, hyperbaric pressure wound therapy, and/or the deliberate introduction of oxygen into the wound environment. The use of negative pressure wound therapy, positive pressure (hyperbaric) pressure therapy and the use of topical oxygen for wound treatment is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,648,488 filed Nov. 21, 2006, and incorporated by reference in its entirety, herein. The use of negative pressure wound therapy, positive pressure (hyperbaric) wound therapy and the application of topical oxygen to the wound environment all increase the effectiveness of the hypochlorous acid within the wound environment. Negative pressure wound treatment therapy occludes micro vessels in a sealed environment thus depriving the wound of oxygen. In addition, negative pressure wound therapy mechanically removes fluids and microbes from the wound site. Consequently, negative pressure therapy and the application of topical oxygen can be used to manipulate the duration of the effectiveness of the hypochlorous acid. Topical application of oxygen to a wound environment and the use of hyperbaric oxygen chambers increase blood flow to wound environment. In addition, the topical application of oxygen within a wound environment increases cell surface hydrophobicity in anaerobic bacteria. When anaerobic bacteria are subjected to oxygen rich environments, cellular stress is caused, resulting in an increase of cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH). When subjected to an oxygen rich environment, anaerobic microbes already expressing CSH will express higher levels of CSH and anaerobic microbes not expressing CSH will become stressed and begin to exhibit CSH. By deliberately introducing oxygen to a wound environment, the binding effect of the hydrophobic wound dressing is enhanced.
The embodiment of the present invention herein described and illustrated is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. It is presented to explain the invention so that others skilled in the art might utilize its teachings. The embodiment of the present invention may be modified within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/571,366 filed Jun. 27, 2011, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61571366 | Jun 2011 | US |