PubMed ID: 22823499The determination of healing rate in the diabetic foot wound is an important assessment parameter that is part of the overall clinical decision-making process in wound treatment. A number of methods that have been used to calculate healing, ranging from length and width measurement, surface area measure changes expressed as a function of time and linear advancement of the wound edge. The objective of this study was to compare surface area measures to linear advancement of the wound edge in 228 diabetic foot ulcers. Each wound was measured using the two methods and analyzed using linear regression to determine the best modeling of the healing process in these wounds. Results indicated that the total surface area change per...
Documentation of healing progress is central to the plan of care for patients with a pressure ulcer....
OBJECTIVE — The goal of this study was to determine whether surrogate markers based primarily on cha...
Introduction: The inter and intra-observer reproducibility of measuring the Wound Ischemia foot Infe...
OBJECTIVE — To assess the ability of the 4-week healing rate to predict complete healing over a 12-w...
Introduction Around a third of people with diabetes will develop a foot ulcer requiring specialist p...
The aim of this article was to validate the checklist contribution of 10 factors relevant to healing...
AbstractÐSeveral wound healing rate measures have been introduced with the main goal of enabling qua...
Purpose The comparison of wound healing rates in clinical trials presents a challenging problem. Wou...
Healing rates of foot ulcers are unknown with the excep-tion of specialist centres where it is betwe...
OBJECTIVE: To determine (1) if offloading with a felt foot plate heals a diabetic foot ulcer, (2) th...
The incidence of ulcers associated to type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) increases every year. We intro...
AIMS: Measurement of wound size can predict healing and provide information to guide treatment. This...
Diabetic Foot Ulcers (DFU) are significant complications of diabetes mellitus. DFU will often heal i...
Diabetic Foot Ulcers (DFU) are significant complications of diabetes mellitus. DFU will often heal i...
OBJECTIVE — To evaluate the probability of wound healing based on percentage of wound area reduction...
Documentation of healing progress is central to the plan of care for patients with a pressure ulcer....
OBJECTIVE — The goal of this study was to determine whether surrogate markers based primarily on cha...
Introduction: The inter and intra-observer reproducibility of measuring the Wound Ischemia foot Infe...
OBJECTIVE — To assess the ability of the 4-week healing rate to predict complete healing over a 12-w...
Introduction Around a third of people with diabetes will develop a foot ulcer requiring specialist p...
The aim of this article was to validate the checklist contribution of 10 factors relevant to healing...
AbstractÐSeveral wound healing rate measures have been introduced with the main goal of enabling qua...
Purpose The comparison of wound healing rates in clinical trials presents a challenging problem. Wou...
Healing rates of foot ulcers are unknown with the excep-tion of specialist centres where it is betwe...
OBJECTIVE: To determine (1) if offloading with a felt foot plate heals a diabetic foot ulcer, (2) th...
The incidence of ulcers associated to type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) increases every year. We intro...
AIMS: Measurement of wound size can predict healing and provide information to guide treatment. This...
Diabetic Foot Ulcers (DFU) are significant complications of diabetes mellitus. DFU will often heal i...
Diabetic Foot Ulcers (DFU) are significant complications of diabetes mellitus. DFU will often heal i...
OBJECTIVE — To evaluate the probability of wound healing based on percentage of wound area reduction...
Documentation of healing progress is central to the plan of care for patients with a pressure ulcer....
OBJECTIVE — The goal of this study was to determine whether surrogate markers based primarily on cha...
Introduction: The inter and intra-observer reproducibility of measuring the Wound Ischemia foot Infe...