Abo Bibliothek: Guest
Plasma Medicine

Erscheint 4 Ausgaben pro Jahr

ISSN Druckformat: 1947-5764

ISSN Online: 1947-5772

SJR: 0.216 SNIP: 0.263 CiteScore™:: 1.4 H-Index: 24

Indexed in

Treatment of Chronic Venous Leg Ulcers with a Hand-Held DBD Plasma Generator

Volumen 2, Ausgabe 1-3, 2012, pp. 19-32
DOI: 10.1615/PlasmaMed.2013005914
Get accessDownload

ABSTRAKT

In cold plasma medicine, anti-inflammatory, anti-itch, antimicrobic, ultraviolet, and other therapeutic modalities are combined within one treatment. Two types of cold plasma can be discerned: direct (dielectric barrier discharge [DBD]) and indirect plasma. DBD generates a low-temperature plasma under atmospheric pressure. The PlasmaDerm VU-2010 device is a noninvasive active medical intervention that does not come into direct contact with skin. For our medical application, a nonequilibrium, weakly ionized, physical DBD plasma is generated by the application of high voltages across small gaps; the electrode is covered by a dielectric. The skin itself acts as the second electrode. Chronic leg ulcers are a major problem among the elderly. The prevalence corresponds to 2−4% of the population. Eighty percent of chronic leg ulcers are caused by varicosis. In general, 3 phases of wound healing (cleaning of the wound ground, granulation, and epithelialization) can be discerned as disturbed in chronic venous leg ulcers. Wound debridement, modern wound dressings, and compression hosiery comprise methods of standard care. Despite these measures, leg ulcers often persist. Additional plasma treatment may have the potential to facilitate wound healing by disinfection, stimulation of tissue regeneration and microcirculation, and acidification of the wound environment. We are currently conducting an ongoing clinical trial with the PlasmaDerm VU-2010 device to assess the safety, applicability, and efficacy of plasma treatment for chronic venous leg ulcers. So far, no adverse effects of plasma treatment have been reported, pointing toward a positive outcome of our study.

REFERENZIERT VON
  1. Svarnas P, Asimakoulas L, Katsafadou M, Pachis K, Kostazos N, Antimisiaris S G, Liposomal membrane disruption by means of miniaturized dielectric-barrier discharge in air: liposome characterization, Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, 50, 34, 2017. Crossref

  2. Shahbazi Rad Zahra, Abbasi Davani Fereydoun, Experimental investigation on electrical characteristics and dose measurement of dielectric barrier discharge plasma device used for therapeutic application, Review of Scientific Instruments, 88, 4, 2017. Crossref

  3. Chatraie Maedeh, Torkaman Giti, Khani Mohammadreza, Salehi Hossein, Shokri Babak, In vivo study of non-invasive effects of non-thermal plasma in pressure ulcer treatment, Scientific Reports, 8, 1, 2018. Crossref

  4. Schmidt Anke, Bekeschus Sander, How Safe is Plasma Treatment in Clinical Applications?, in Textbook of Good Clinical Practice in Cold Plasma Therapy, 2022. Crossref

  5. Bogdanov T., Tsonev I., Traikov L., Microwave plasma torch for wound treatment, Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 1598, 1, 2020. Crossref

Digitales Portal Digitale Bibliothek eBooks Zeitschriften Referenzen und Berichte Forschungssammlungen Preise und Aborichtlinien Begell House Kontakt Language English 中文 Русский Português German French Spain