Journal of Wound Research and Technology
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): November - May 2024

A comparison of the effects of contemporary dressings and 1% Povidone Iodine on the healing of diabetic ulceration: A Quasy Experiment

Indra Ariani (STIKES Bina Husada)
Dimas Putra Harsya (STIKES Bina Husada)
Asmat Burhan (Universitas Harapan Bangsa)



Article Info

Publish Date
28 Apr 2024

Abstract

Background: Diabetes ulcers are a consequence of diabetes mellitus (DM). Modern dressing techniques are essential for the treatment of diabetic ulcers, which are lesions that necessitate specific attention and control. The researchers set out to find out how a diabetic ulcer wound healing score changed after using a contemporary dressing. Aims: Analyse the effectiveness of dressing and povidone iodine 1% on diabetic foot ulcer healing. Design and Methods: Quasi experiment, pre-test and post-test of experiment group using modern dressing and control group using iodine. Total sampling technique was used in this study with a total of 84 patients. Data analysis was performed with a parametric test, namely paired t-test, and independent t-test. Results: Both groups originally exhibited comparable wound diameters. On the 30th day, there was a decrease in wound size score (MD-CI) due to modern dressing. The drop was -1.94 with a 95% confidence interval of -4.37 to 0.14. The p-value was 0.043 and the r-squared value was -0.121. On the 60th day, the MD-CI treatment resulted in a reduction in wound size of -5.14 (95% confidence interval: -11.50 to -1.34; p=0.013; r2= -0.416). Conclusion: At first, contemporary dressing therapy achieved a marginal reduction in lesion size. However, lesion size decreased substantially in diabetic foot ulcers after day 60. It is possible to suggest this intervention as a therapeutic approach for diabetic foot ulcers

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jwrt

Publisher

Subject

Medicine & Pharmacology Nursing

Description

Journal of Wound Research and Technology is an essential source of information for all wound care professionals. We publish all aspects of the promotion, prevention, and treatment of wounds and associated skin conditions to improve patient care. With topics spanning surgery, endocrinology, ...