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Treatment of pressure ulcers: a clinical practice guideline from the American College of Physicians [with consumer summary]
Qaseem A, Humphrey LL, Forciea MA, Starkey M, Denberg TD, for the Clinical Guidelines Committee [American College of Physicians]
Annals of Internal Medicine 2015 Mar 3;162(5):370-379
practice guideline

DESCRIPTION: The American College of Physicians (ACP) developed this guideline to present the evidence and provide clinical recommendations based on the comparative effectiveness of treatments of pressure ulcers. METHODS: This guideline is based on published literature on this topic that was identified by using Medline, Embase, CINAHL, EBM Reviews, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects, and the Health Technology Assessment database through February 2014. Searches were limited to English-language publications. The outcomes evaluated for this guideline include complete wound healing, wound size (surface area, volume, and depth) reduction, pain, prevention of sepsis, prevention of osteomyelitis, recurrence rate, and harms of treatment (including but not limited to pain, dermatologic complications, bleeding, and infection). This guideline grades the quality of evidence and strength of recommendations by using ACP's clinical practice guidelines grading system. The target audience for this guideline includes all clinicians, and the target patient population is patients with pressure ulcers. RECOMMENDATION 1: ACP recommends that clinicians use protein or amino acid supplementation in patients with pressure ulcers to reduce wound size (grade: weak recommendation, low-quality evidence). RECOMMENDATION 2: ACP recommends that clinicians use hydrocolloid or foam dressings in patients with pressure ulcers to reduce wound size (grade: weak recommendation, low-quality evidence). RECOMMENDATION 3: ACP recommends that clinicians use electrical stimulation as adjunctive therapy in patients with pressure ulcers to accelerate wound healing (grade: weak recommendation, moderate-quality evidence).

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