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Abstract
The variety of wound types has resulted in a wide range of wound dressings with new
products frequently introduced to target different aspects of the wound healing process.
The ideal dressing should achieve rapid healing at reasonable cost with minimal inconvenience
to the patient. This article offers a review of the common wound management dressings
and emerging technologies for achieving improved wound healing. It also reviews many
of the dressings and novel polymers used for the delivery of drugs to acute, chronic
and other types of wound. These include hydrocolloids, alginates, hydrogels, polyurethane,
collagen, chitosan, pectin and hyaluronic acid. There is also a brief section on the
use of biological polymers as tissue engineered scaffolds and skin grafts. Pharmacological
agents such as antibiotics, vitamins, minerals, growth factors and other wound healing
accelerators that take active part in the healing process are discussed. Direct delivery
of these agents to the wound site is desirable, particularly when systemic delivery
could cause organ damage due to toxicological concerns associated with the preferred
agents. This review concerns the requirement for formulations with improved properties
for effective and accurate delivery of the required therapeutic agents. General formulation
approaches towards achieving optimum physical properties and controlled delivery characteristics
for an active wound healing dosage form are also considered briefly.