Filters
- adhesive dressing (2)
- Contamination Prevention (1)
- cover dressing (2)
- Island Dressing (2)
- Island Dressings (1)
- IV Dressing (2)
- iv sites (2)
- Non Adherent Dressings (1)
- Non-Adherent (1)
- Post Operative (1)
- pressure ulcers (8)
- Surgical Wounds (1)
- telfa (3)
- Wound dressing (5)
- 449600 (1)
- Acute Wounds (2)
- Chronic Wounds (1)
- Full Thickness (1)
- Hydate Wound Bed (1)
- Hydrogel (4)
- Moist Wound Healing (6)
- Partial Thickness (2)
- Pressure Ulcers (16)
- Prevent Bacteria Growth (1)
- Solosite (1)
- Venous Stasis Ulcers (1)
- Wound Gel (3)
- 187955 (1)
- advanced wound care (6)
- bed sore treatment (1)
- chronic wound care (1)
- Donor Sites (1)
- Duoderm Cgf (1)
- Duoderm Extra Thin (1)
- DuoDERM Extra Thin dressing (1)
- Hydrocolloid Wound Dressing (1)
- hypoallergenic wound supplies (1)
- Low Profile Dressing (1)
- Padded (1)
- pressure ulcer dressing (1)
- surgical wound dressing (1)
- X-Thin (1)
- Allevyn Adhesive (1)
- Allevyn Dressings (1)
- Burns (2)
- Chronic wounds (2)
- Control Exudate Drainage (1)
- Diabetic Ulcers (2)
- Exudative wounds (2)
- Foam Adhesive Dressing (1)
- Foot Ulcers (1)
- Infected wounds (2)
- superficial burns (2)
- Treat Burns (2)
- Coloplast (3)
- Hydrophilic (1)
- Liquid Wound Dressing (1)
- superficial wounds (2)
- Triad (1)
- venous stasis ulcers (1)
- Allevy n Gel Border (3)
- Allevyn Gentle (1)
- Allevyn Gentle Border (3)
- Diabetic Foot ulcers (4)
- leg ulcers (7)
- Surgical wounds (2)
- 66007630 (1)
- Absorbent Foam Pad (1)
- allevyn heel (1)
- Allevyn Heel Wound Dressings (1)
- cone shaped (1)
- cup shape (1)
- exudate (1)
- foam dressing (1)
- foam pad (1)
- Foot Wound Care (1)
- Heel Pressure (1)
- non adhesive (1)
- wound on heel (1)
- Absorbent Gauze Pads (1)
- adhesive pads (1)
- cover wounds (1)
- gauze pads (1)
- Island Wound Dressing (1)
- kendall (1)
- non adherent (1)
- non stick (1)
- Telfa Dressing (1)
- telfa pads (1)
- Absorb Fluid (1)
- Derm (1)
- Dynaderm (1)
- 3110 (1)
- Comfeel Plus (1)
- donor sites (2)
- superficial partial thickness burns (1)
- Amorphous Gel (1)
- Amorphous NonSterile (1)
- HA (1)
- Hydrogel Wound Dressing (3)
- Lidocaine (1)
- Regenecare (1)
- Regenecare Gel (1)
- absorb wound fluid (1)
- algisite m (1)
- calcium alginate dressing (1)
- fibers (1)
- lacerations (2)
- skin tears (3)
- wound cavity (1)
- abrasions (1)
- abtimicrobial (1)
- aspergillus niger (1)
- candida albican (1)
- kill mrsa (1)
- kill vre (1)
- resistant bacteria (1)
- silver cream (1)
- silver gel (1)
- wound gel (1)
- Diabetic Foot Ulcers (2)
- Leg ulcers (2)
- Antimicrobial (1)
- Antimicrobial Wound Care Dressing (1)
- Aquacel (3)
- AquaCel Ag (1)
- AquaCel Ag Dressing (1)
- AquaCel Ag Ribbon (1)
- AquaCel Rope (1)
- Exuding wounds (1)
- Hydrofiber (1)
- Ionic silver (1)
- prevent ulcers (3)
- Silver Dressing (1)
- Silver Hydrofiber Dressing (1)
- Treat Ulcers (2)
- Border Dressing (1)
- Dermal ulcers (1)
- Duoderm Dressings (1)
- Foam Border (1)
- hydrocolloid (1)
- Partial thickness burns (1)
- amorphous hydrogel (2)
- Excel-Gel (1)
- minor burns (1)
- Peptic Ulcers (1)
- Skin Wounds (1)
- Amerigel (1)
- Treat ulcerative colitis (1)
- Biatain (1)
- Sacral (1)
- Treat Second degree burns (1)
- Carboxyl (1)
- Carboxyl Methylcellulose (1)
- Collagen (1)
- Collagen Dressing (1)
- DermaCol (1)
- Ethylenediamine-tetraacetic Acid (1)
- Full-Thickness Wounds (1)
- Matrix Dressings (1)
- Sodium Alginate (1)
- Tissue Regeneration (1)
- Exuding Wounds (2)
- Fluid Absorption (2)
- Healing Environment (2)
- Heel Dressings (2)
- Pain Reduction (2)
Wound Care Dressings & Wound Dressings to Pressure Ulcers
Wound Care Dressings
Wound dressings cover and protect injured skin while promoting appropriate healing conditions. Dressings range from traditional (gauze, bandages, cotton) to modern/advanced types (films, foams, hydrogels, hydrocolloids, alginates, etc.). The key aims are to keep a sterile, moist wound environment, allow gas exchange, control drainage, protect against infection, and permit easy inspection and painless changes. Choice of dressing depends on wound type, depth, exudate level, and healing stage.
-
Traditional dressings: Examples include gauze pads or rolls (woven or non-woven cotton or rayon) and tulle/impregnated gauze (e.g. petrolatum-impregnated Xeroform or paraffin-based Jelonet). These are generally dry coverings that absorb exudate and protect from contamination. Gauze must be changed frequently – if it becomes wet it can macerate surrounding skin and adhere to the wound, making removal painful. Bandages and compression wraps (cotton or elastic) secure dressings in place and provide pressure (useful for venous ulcers). Overall, traditional gauze/tape dressings are mainly used for clean, low-exudate wounds or as a secondary backing wrap. They do not maintain a moist environment, so chronic or deep wounds heal more slowly under gauze.
-
Modern (interactive) dressings: These advanced products are designed to facilitate healing by keeping the wound moist, aiding debridement, and controlling bacteria. Major categories include:
- Transparent films: Thin polyurethane films (like Tegaderm™) that stick to intact skin, are waterproof and impermeable to bacteria yet transmit water vapor and oxygen. They allow continuous wound observation without removal and provide autolytic debridement of dead skin. Films are highly elastic and conformable. They are best for superficial, low-exudate wounds (e.g. epidermal abrasions, donor sites) because they have little absorptive capacity.
- Foam dressings: Soft polyurethane foams (with or without adhesive borders) that absorb moderate to heavy exudate. Foams “contour to wound shape” and trap fluid in their hydrophilic core while allowing vapor to escape. They cushion and insulate, making them good for pressure ulcers, leg ulcers or large healing wounds. Foam dressings handle moderate-to-high drainage and can be used on granulating wounds or as a secondary layer. (They should not be used on dry wounds, as they need some moisture to work.)
- Hydrocolloids: Adhesive gel-forming films or wafers (e.g. Duoderm™, Comfeel™, Tegasorb™). They contain carboxymethylcellulose or gelatin that absorbs fluid and swells into a moist gel over the wound. Hydrocolloids are waterproof and only semi-permeable to vapor; they remain in place for days. They provide “moist environment” dressings ideal for light-to-moderate exudate wounds (e.g. pressure ulcers, burns, traumatic wounds). On contact with exudate they protect granulation tissue and debride slough autolytically. (They are typically avoided on very wet or infected wounds, and because they gel they can sometimes have a distinctive odor or be mistaken for pus.)
- Hydrogels: Water-rich gel sheets or amorphous gels that donate moisture. Made of >70% water or glycerin, they soothe and cool burn or ulcer wounds, help liquefy necrotic tissue, and hydrate dry scabs. Hydrogels are non-adhesive and easily removable, making them good for dry or necrotic wounds, pressure sores and shallow burns. They promote a moist, cooling environment and enable autolytic debridement. Drawbacks: on highly exuding wounds they can accumulate fluid and risk maceration if not changed frequently.
- Alginate dressings: Made from seaweed-derived calcium/sodium alginate fibers. When applied to a wound, they form a gel by exchanging ions with wound fluid. These are highly absorbent dressings (much more than gauze) and are used on moderately to heavily draining wounds. They also have mild hemostatic properties (calcium alginate can promote clotting). Because they dehydrate the wound bed, alginates should always be covered by a secondary dressing (like gauze or film) to keep the wound moist. Alginate sheets (e.g. Kaltostat™, Sorbsan™) are unsuitable for dry wounds or wounds over bone.
- Hydrofibers and Collagens: (e.g. synthetic carboxymethylcellulose fibers like AQUACEL™, or collagen/collagen-containing gels). These behave similarly to alginates/hydrogels by gelling on contact with fluid, providing high absorption or structural support. They maintain moisture and promote granulation (collagen dressings supply matrix for tissue regrowth). These advanced fibers often have silver or honey additives for infection control.
- Medicated dressings: Many dressings now contain antimicrobials. For example, silver-impregnated films/foams (e.g. silver sulfadiazine, Silverlon®) or iodine-impregnated substrates release antiseptics to reduce bacterial load. Honey-impregnated dressings (Manuka honey) also promote healing and inhibit microbes. (These specialized dressings are used when infection is a concern.)
- Composite and Free-form: Some products combine layers (e.g. non-adherent contact layer + absorbent pad + adhesive border) for use on irregular or highly exuding wounds. Newer concepts include bioengineered skin substitutes (cultured epithelial sheets) – but those are beyond basic care.
-
Choosing a dressing: Selection is based on wound exudate, depth, and location. In general, moist (wet) wounds need absorbent dressings, and dry wounds need moisture-donating dressings. For example, heavy exudate wounds call for foams or alginates, whereas dry wounds may benefit from hydrogels or hydrocolloids to provide moisture. Shallow epidermal abrasions can often be managed with transparent films alone while deeper or necrotic wounds might need gels and frequent changes. Dressings should be chosen to create a moist healing environment without pooling fluid, and to allow oxygen exchange. The “ideal dressing” is sterile, moist but not soggy, non-adherent, protective and comfortable. Clinicians typically assess the wound (amount of drainage, infection status, pain, location) and patient factors (age, mobility, allergies) to pick or combine appropriate dressings.
-
Precautions and side effects: While dressings themselves are not drugs, they can have adverse effects. Wet maceration: Occlusive dressings (films, hydrocolloids) can overhydrate skin if left too long, leading to white, softened tissue around the wound. Adherence: Dry gauze or fibrous dressings can stick to a wound, tearing healing tissue and causing pain on removal. Allergic contact: Some patients react to adhesives, antiseptic agents, or materials (latex, adhesives, propylene glycol in gels) with contact dermatitis. Infection: Improperly changed or non-sterile dressings can introduce bacteria. Occlusive dressings should not be used if an infection is untreated, as they could trap bacteria. Chemical effects: Dressings with iodine or silver rarely can cause systemic effects (thyroid dysfunction with iodine, argyria with silver) if used extensively, especially on large burns.
In summary, wound care dressings span a spectrum from simple gauze to high-tech polymers. Modern dressings (films, foams, hydrogels, hydrocolloids, alginates, etc.) are designed to maintain optimal moisture and protect the wound while allowing gas exchange and debridement. Proper selection and technique are critical: the wrong dressing can impede healing (e.g. dry a wound out or over-saturate it). By contrast, well-chosen dressings can significantly accelerate healing by providing a stable, moist environment for tissue repair. All dressing changes and selections should follow clinical guidelines and the supervising healthcare provider’s instructions.
-
Sale
$ 0.31Telfa Adhesive Island Dressing 2 x 3.75 inches, Sterile
4 reviewsTelfa Adhesive Island Dressing is designed to cover and protect surgical wounds, cuts, and abrasions securely. The dressing features a non-adherent...
View full details -
Sale 23%
Original price $ 19.50Current price $ 14.98Solosite Gel Hydrogel Wound Dressing 3 oz
3 reviewsSolosite Gel is a topical wound dressing that is used to provide a moist environment for healing and to help promote tissue and cell regeneration. ...
View full details -
Sale 29%
Original price $ 48.95Current price $ 34.95Duoderm Extra Thin Dressing 4 x4 Hydrocolloid Dressings 10/box by Convatec
12 reviewsThe #1 Choice for Advanced Wound Healing & Skin Protection Experience the industry-leading power of advanced wound care with DuoDERM Extra Thin...
View full details -
Sale
$ 115.00Allevyn Adhesive Foam Wound Healing Dressings, Smith & Nephew
4 reviewsAllevyn adhesive foam wound healing dressings are an effective way to help promote the healing of wounds. The dressings are made of a soft foam tha...
View full details -
Sale 31%
Original price $ 39.95Current price $ 27.50Triad Hydrophilic Wound Dressing 2.5 oz
1 reviewColopast Triad Hydrophilic Wound Dressing is a zinc oxide based hydrophilic paste for treating weeping and hard-to-dress wounds. Triad Hydrophilic ...
View full details -
Sale 21%
Original price $ 99.80Current price $ 79.00Allevyn Gentle Border Gel Adhesive Foam Dressing 5" x 5" (10 Pack)
4 reviewsALLEVYN Gentle Border range has been designed for people with particularly sensitive or fragile skin. These dressings have a soft silicone gel adhe...
View full details -
Sale 20%
Low Stock
Original price $ 55.95Current price $ 45.00Allevyn Heel Wound Dressings 5 per box
1 reviewAllevyn heel wound dressing is designed to provide a moist wound environment, which is beneficial for wound healing. The dressings consist of a foa...
View full details -
Sold out
Original price $ 39.95Current price $ 29.80Telfa Adhesive Island Dressing 4 x 5, Sterile 25/Box
2 reviewsTelfa Adhesive Island Dressings 4 x 5 are designed for use on lightly draining wounds, offering a soft, absorbent, and non-adherent contact layer t...
View full details -
Sale 30%
Original price $ 19.95Current price $ 14.00Hydrocolloid Foam Dressing 4" x 4", 10/box
4 reviewsDynaDerm Hydrocolloid Dressing 4” x 4” works to maintain moisture on the site of your wound for a faster healing time. A single dressing can last ...
View full details -
Sale
$ 59.00Comfeel Plus Ulcer Dressing 4" x 4", 10/Box - Coloplast
1 reviewColoplast Comfeel Plus is a hydrocolloid dressing that can be used in the management of low to moderate exuding venous leg ulcers, pressure ulcers,...
View full details -
Sale 36%
Original price $ 38.95Current price $ 24.95Regenecare HA Hydrogel Wound Dressing with Lidocaine Gel (Amorphous Gel) 3 oz
Regenecare HA Hydrogel Wound Dressing with Lidocaine Gel (Amorphous Gel) is used for the management of non-infected, partial- to full-thickness wou...
View full details -
Sale
$ 40.50Algisite M Calcium Alginate Dressings, 10/Box
1 reviewAlgiSite M Calcium Alginate Dressing creates and maintains a moist healing environment, enabling epithelial cells to migrate freely across the woun...
View full details -
Sale
$ 43.50Silver-Sept Antimicrobial Skin and Wound Gel 1.5 oz
Silver-Sept Antimicrobial Skin and Wound Gel is a long-lasting antimicrobial barrier hydrogel that is designed for antiseptic wound care management...
View full details -
Sale 19%
Original price $ 69.00Current price $ 56.00Allevyn Gentle Border Gel Adhesive Foam Dressing 3" x 3" (10 Pack)
1 reviewSmith and Nephew Allevyn Gentle Adhesive Border is a range of versatile foam dressings to suit multiple wound types, providing an optimal moist env...
View full details -
Sale
$ 29.95AquaCel Ag Advantage Silver Hydrofiber Wound Dressing Ribbon Rope 3/4" x 18 inch
Unlock the power of advanced wound care with the AQUACEL® Ag Advantage Silver Hydrofiber Dressing Ribbon Rope by ConvaTec. Designed for optimal hea...
View full details -
Sale 34%
Original price $ 14.50Current price $ 9.60Border Gauze Sterile with Adhesive Border 2 inch x 3.75 inch (Generic Telfa)
Adhesive Island Dressing is a sterile adhesive dressing that is used to cover and protect wounds. The dressing is made of a soft, non-woven fabric ...
View full details -
Sale 32%
Original price $ 65.95Current price $ 45.00Duoderm Hydrocolloid Dressing with Adhesive CGF Border 2.5" x 2.5" Sterile, 5/Box
1 reviewDuoDERM® CGF® Border Sterile Dressing by ConvaTec is a superior hydrocolloid wound care solution specifically engineered for hard-to-dress areas. W...
View full details -
Sold out
Original price $ 26.95Current price $ 17.50Excel-Gel Hydrogel Wound Dressing 4 oz
Excel-Gel Hydrogel Wound Dressing (4 oz) by MPM Medical is a topical wound care product designed for the management and treatment of various types ...
View full details -
Sale 26%
Original price $ 38.95Current price $ 28.95Amerigel Hydrogel Wound Dressing 1 oz
Amerigel Hydrogel Wound Dressing is a water-based gel that is used to treat and protect wounds. The gel forms a protective barrier over the wound t...
View full details -
Sale 24%
Original price $ 124.95Current price $ 94.95Biatain Sacral 9 x 9 Adhesive Border Dressings (5-Pack)
Biatain Sacral 9 x 9 Adhesive Border Dressings are a self-adherent foam dressing. Made with a highly absorbent, three-dimensional polymer pad. Made...
View full details -
Sale
$ 65.00DermaCol Collagen Matrix Dressings, Sterile 10/Box
DermaCol Collagen Matrix Dressings are designed to support the healing of partial and full-thickness wounds, including pressure ulcers, diabetic ul...
View full details -
Sale 30%
Original price $ 139.00Current price $ 97.00Aquacel Silicone Foam Sacral Dressing with Border Waterproof Film Backing 7" x 8" (5/Box)
Discover advanced wound care with the AQUACEL® Silicone Foam Sacral Dressing with Border by ConvaTec. Specifically designed to address the unique n...
View full details -
Sale 18%
Original price $ 159.00Current price $ 129.95Aquacel Silicone Foam Heel Dressing with Border Waterproof Film Backing 8 x 5.5" (5/Box)
Introducing the AQUACEL® Silicone Foam Heel Dressing with Border by ConvaTec — a premium solution engineered to meet the unique challenges of heel ...
View full details -
Sold out
$ 39.00Allevyn Gentle Border Gel Adhesive Foam Dressing 7" x 7" (10 Pack)
Smith and Nephew Allevyn Gentle Adhesive Border is a range of versatile foam dressings to suit multiple wound types, providing an optimal moist env...
View full details
People Also Searched For
Wound Care Dressings
Wound dressings cover and protect injured skin while promoting appropriate healing conditions. Dressings range from traditional (gauze, bandages, cotton) to modern/advanced types (films, foams, hydrogels, hydrocolloids, alginates, etc.). The key aims are to keep a sterile, moist wound environment, allow gas exchange, control drainage, protect against infection, and permit easy inspection and painless changes. Choice of dressing depends on wound type, depth, exudate level, and healing stage.
-
Traditional dressings: Examples include gauze pads or rolls (woven or non-woven cotton or rayon) and tulle/impregnated gauze (e.g. petrolatum-impregnated Xeroform or paraffin-based Jelonet). These are generally dry coverings that absorb exudate and protect from contamination. Gauze must be changed frequently – if it becomes wet it can macerate surrounding skin and adhere to the wound, making removal painful. Bandages and compression wraps (cotton or elastic) secure dressings in place and provide pressure (useful for venous ulcers). Overall, traditional gauze/tape dressings are mainly used for clean, low-exudate wounds or as a secondary backing wrap. They do not maintain a moist environment, so chronic or deep wounds heal more slowly under gauze.
-
Modern (interactive) dressings: These advanced products are designed to facilitate healing by keeping the wound moist, aiding debridement, and controlling bacteria. Major categories include:
- Transparent films: Thin polyurethane films (like Tegaderm™) that stick to intact skin, are waterproof and impermeable to bacteria yet transmit water vapor and oxygen. They allow continuous wound observation without removal and provide autolytic debridement of dead skin. Films are highly elastic and conformable. They are best for superficial, low-exudate wounds (e.g. epidermal abrasions, donor sites) because they have little absorptive capacity.
- Foam dressings: Soft polyurethane foams (with or without adhesive borders) that absorb moderate to heavy exudate. Foams “contour to wound shape” and trap fluid in their hydrophilic core while allowing vapor to escape. They cushion and insulate, making them good for pressure ulcers, leg ulcers or large healing wounds. Foam dressings handle moderate-to-high drainage and can be used on granulating wounds or as a secondary layer. (They should not be used on dry wounds, as they need some moisture to work.)
- Hydrocolloids: Adhesive gel-forming films or wafers (e.g. Duoderm™, Comfeel™, Tegasorb™). They contain carboxymethylcellulose or gelatin that absorbs fluid and swells into a moist gel over the wound. Hydrocolloids are waterproof and only semi-permeable to vapor; they remain in place for days. They provide “moist environment” dressings ideal for light-to-moderate exudate wounds (e.g. pressure ulcers, burns, traumatic wounds). On contact with exudate they protect granulation tissue and debride slough autolytically. (They are typically avoided on very wet or infected wounds, and because they gel they can sometimes have a distinctive odor or be mistaken for pus.)
- Hydrogels: Water-rich gel sheets or amorphous gels that donate moisture. Made of >70% water or glycerin, they soothe and cool burn or ulcer wounds, help liquefy necrotic tissue, and hydrate dry scabs. Hydrogels are non-adhesive and easily removable, making them good for dry or necrotic wounds, pressure sores and shallow burns. They promote a moist, cooling environment and enable autolytic debridement. Drawbacks: on highly exuding wounds they can accumulate fluid and risk maceration if not changed frequently.
- Alginate dressings: Made from seaweed-derived calcium/sodium alginate fibers. When applied to a wound, they form a gel by exchanging ions with wound fluid. These are highly absorbent dressings (much more than gauze) and are used on moderately to heavily draining wounds. They also have mild hemostatic properties (calcium alginate can promote clotting). Because they dehydrate the wound bed, alginates should always be covered by a secondary dressing (like gauze or film) to keep the wound moist. Alginate sheets (e.g. Kaltostat™, Sorbsan™) are unsuitable for dry wounds or wounds over bone.
- Hydrofibers and Collagens: (e.g. synthetic carboxymethylcellulose fibers like AQUACEL™, or collagen/collagen-containing gels). These behave similarly to alginates/hydrogels by gelling on contact with fluid, providing high absorption or structural support. They maintain moisture and promote granulation (collagen dressings supply matrix for tissue regrowth). These advanced fibers often have silver or honey additives for infection control.
- Medicated dressings: Many dressings now contain antimicrobials. For example, silver-impregnated films/foams (e.g. silver sulfadiazine, Silverlon®) or iodine-impregnated substrates release antiseptics to reduce bacterial load. Honey-impregnated dressings (Manuka honey) also promote healing and inhibit microbes. (These specialized dressings are used when infection is a concern.)
- Composite and Free-form: Some products combine layers (e.g. non-adherent contact layer + absorbent pad + adhesive border) for use on irregular or highly exuding wounds. Newer concepts include bioengineered skin substitutes (cultured epithelial sheets) – but those are beyond basic care.
-
Choosing a dressing: Selection is based on wound exudate, depth, and location. In general, moist (wet) wounds need absorbent dressings, and dry wounds need moisture-donating dressings. For example, heavy exudate wounds call for foams or alginates, whereas dry wounds may benefit from hydrogels or hydrocolloids to provide moisture. Shallow epidermal abrasions can often be managed with transparent films alone while deeper or necrotic wounds might need gels and frequent changes. Dressings should be chosen to create a moist healing environment without pooling fluid, and to allow oxygen exchange. The “ideal dressing” is sterile, moist but not soggy, non-adherent, protective and comfortable. Clinicians typically assess the wound (amount of drainage, infection status, pain, location) and patient factors (age, mobility, allergies) to pick or combine appropriate dressings.
-
Precautions and side effects: While dressings themselves are not drugs, they can have adverse effects. Wet maceration: Occlusive dressings (films, hydrocolloids) can overhydrate skin if left too long, leading to white, softened tissue around the wound. Adherence: Dry gauze or fibrous dressings can stick to a wound, tearing healing tissue and causing pain on removal. Allergic contact: Some patients react to adhesives, antiseptic agents, or materials (latex, adhesives, propylene glycol in gels) with contact dermatitis. Infection: Improperly changed or non-sterile dressings can introduce bacteria. Occlusive dressings should not be used if an infection is untreated, as they could trap bacteria. Chemical effects: Dressings with iodine or silver rarely can cause systemic effects (thyroid dysfunction with iodine, argyria with silver) if used extensively, especially on large burns.
In summary, wound care dressings span a spectrum from simple gauze to high-tech polymers. Modern dressings (films, foams, hydrogels, hydrocolloids, alginates, etc.) are designed to maintain optimal moisture and protect the wound while allowing gas exchange and debridement. Proper selection and technique are critical: the wrong dressing can impede healing (e.g. dry a wound out or over-saturate it). By contrast, well-chosen dressings can significantly accelerate healing by providing a stable, moist environment for tissue repair. All dressing changes and selections should follow clinical guidelines and the supervising healthcare provider’s instructions.
