Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting

<p>The pathogenesis of chronic wounds is complex resulting in major difficulties in the management of such wounds. Diabetes mellitus, venous ulceration and pressure sores contribute to the rapidly increasing burden of chronic wounds, not only to the patient but also to the health care system....

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Main Author: JMRWW Wadinamby
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sri Lankan Society for Microbiology 2013-08-01
Series:Sri Lankan Journal of Infectious Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sljid.sljol.info/articles/5918
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spelling doaj-a0c33448ba50470495c475021554d2962021-05-04T03:45:19ZengSri Lankan Society for MicrobiologySri Lankan Journal of Infectious Diseases2012-81692448-96542013-08-013221610.4038/sljid.v3i2.59184654Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital settingJMRWW Wadinamby0Base Hospital, Angoda (Infectious Diseases Hospital), Gothatuwa New Town, Angoda<p>The pathogenesis of chronic wounds is complex resulting in major difficulties in the management of such wounds. Diabetes mellitus, venous ulceration and pressure sores contribute to the rapidly increasing burden of chronic wounds, not only to the patient but also to the health care system. Improved understanding of the factors which contribute to non healing of wounds and application of appropriate management modalities, including a multidisciplinary team approach would help reduce the time for healing of such wounds. Colonization and infection of chronic wounds is only one component of the pathogenesis which however requires access to a modern microbiology laboratory. The setting up of chronic wound clinics in 3 hospitals in Sri Lanka may provide a model for improving the outcome of such wounds in a relatively under resourced setting.</p><p class="Default">DOI: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/sljid.v3i2.5918">http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/sljid.v3i2.5918</a> <em></em></p> <p class="Default"><em>Sri Lankan Journal of Infectious Diseases 2013; Vol.3(2):2-16</em></p>https://sljid.sljol.info/articles/5918chronic woundspathogenesisrepairmicrobiology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author JMRWW Wadinamby
spellingShingle JMRWW Wadinamby
Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting
Sri Lankan Journal of Infectious Diseases
chronic wounds
pathogenesis
repair
microbiology
author_facet JMRWW Wadinamby
author_sort JMRWW Wadinamby
title Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting
title_short Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting
title_full Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting
title_fullStr Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting
title_full_unstemmed Chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary Sri Lankan hospital setting
title_sort chronic wounds and their management and application in a contemporary sri lankan hospital setting
publisher Sri Lankan Society for Microbiology
series Sri Lankan Journal of Infectious Diseases
issn 2012-8169
2448-9654
publishDate 2013-08-01
description <p>The pathogenesis of chronic wounds is complex resulting in major difficulties in the management of such wounds. Diabetes mellitus, venous ulceration and pressure sores contribute to the rapidly increasing burden of chronic wounds, not only to the patient but also to the health care system. Improved understanding of the factors which contribute to non healing of wounds and application of appropriate management modalities, including a multidisciplinary team approach would help reduce the time for healing of such wounds. Colonization and infection of chronic wounds is only one component of the pathogenesis which however requires access to a modern microbiology laboratory. The setting up of chronic wound clinics in 3 hospitals in Sri Lanka may provide a model for improving the outcome of such wounds in a relatively under resourced setting.</p><p class="Default">DOI: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/sljid.v3i2.5918">http://dx.doi.org/10.4038/sljid.v3i2.5918</a> <em></em></p> <p class="Default"><em>Sri Lankan Journal of Infectious Diseases 2013; Vol.3(2):2-16</em></p>
topic chronic wounds
pathogenesis
repair
microbiology
url https://sljid.sljol.info/articles/5918
work_keys_str_mv AT jmrwwwadinamby chronicwoundsandtheirmanagementandapplicationinacontemporarysrilankanhospitalsetting
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