Bioengineering (Oct 2024)

A Scoping Review of ‘Smart’ Dressings for Diagnosing Surgical Site Infection: A Focus on Arthroplasty

  • Samuel W. King,
  • Alexander Abouharb,
  • Thomas Doggett,
  • Mohamad Taufiqurrakhman,
  • Jeya Palan,
  • Bulut Freear,
  • Hemant Pandit,
  • Bernard H. van Duren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11101049
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 1049

Abstract

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Early diagnosis and treatment of surgical wound infection can be challenging. This is especially relevant in the management of periprosthetic joint infection: early detection is key to success and reducing morbidity, mortality and resource use. ‘Smart’ dressings have been developed to detect parameters suggestive of infection. This scoping review investigates the current status of the field, limited to devices tested in animal models and/or humans, with a focus on their application to arthroplasty. The literature was searched using MEDLINE/PubMed and Embase databases from 2000 to 2023. Original articles assessing external sensing methods for the detection of wound infection in animal models or human participants were included. Sixteen articles were eligible. The results were broadly divided by sensing method: colorimetric, electrochemical and fluorescence/photothermal responses. Six of the devices detected more than one parameter (multimodal), while the rest were unimodal. The most common parameters examined were temperature and pH. Most ‘smart’ dressings focused on diagnosing infection in chronic wounds, and none were tested in humans with wound infections. There is limited late-stage research into using dressing sensors to diagnose wound infection in post-surgical patients. Future research should explore this to enable inpatient and remote outpatient monitoring of post-operative wounds to detect wound infection.

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