Mepitel®

Status: In Stock

CA$54.60

 

Gentle two-sided wound contact layer - minimise pain for your patients.

Mepitel® is a gentle two-sided wound contact layer with Safetac® - the original less-pain contact layer with silicone adhesion. It's designed to mould softly to skin without sticking to the moist wound 1 - so you can remove it easily without damaging the skin 2. That means less pain for your patients 3. 

Safetac also protects new tissue and intact skin - so wounds remain undisturbed to support faster natural healing 3  4  5  6. And it seals the wound margins to protect skin from damaging leaks and maceration 7  8  9.

The perforated design lets exudate pass through to a secondary absorbent dressing. And you can leave it place, delivering topical treatments with ease. The dressing integrity reduces the need for frequent primary dressing changes and allows secondary dressing changes without disturbing healing. 

  • True undisturbed healing - it can remain in place for up to 14 days 10 
  • Mepitel is clinically proven to heal scalds faster and with less pain and cost, compared to silver sulfadiazine 3  
  • Doesn't leave residues and maintains functional qualities over time 
  • Good transparency, so you can assess healing progress without removing the contact layer 

When to use Mepitel

Mepitel with Safetac protects the wound and the skin. It's designed and clinically proven for use in treating a wide range of wounds such as skin tears, skin abrasions, sutured wounds, partial thickness burns, lacerations, partial and full thickness grafts, diabetic ulcers, venous and arterial ulcers. Mepitel can also be used as a protective layer on non-exuding wounds, blisters, fragile skin and exposed fragile tissues.

The open structure of Mepitel allows, where clinically indicated, topical ointments to pass through onto the wound.

You can use Mepitel together with Mesorb®; or for high-exuding wounds, with Mextra®Superabsorbent; with Tubifast® fixation; and also under compression bandages. Mepitel can also be used in conjunction with Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT).


 

More Info

More Info

References

  1. White R. Evidence for atraumatic soft silicone wound dressing use. Wounds UK. 2005;1(3):104-109.
  2. Waring M, et al. An evaluation of the skin stripping of wound dressing adhesives. J Wound Care 2011;20(9):412-422.
  3. Gotschall CS, et al. Prospective, randomized study of the efficacy of Mepitel on children with partial-thickness scalds. J Burn Care and Rehabil. 1998;19(4):279-283.
  4. Silverstein P, et al. An open, parallel, randomized, comparative, multicenter study to evaluate the cost-effectiveness, performance, tolerance, and safety of a silver-containing soft silicone foam dressing (intervention) vs silver sulfadiazine cream. J Burn Care Res. 2011;32(6):617-626.
  5. Gee Kee EL, et al. Randomized controlled trial of three burns dressings for partial thickness burns in children. Burns. 2015;41(5):946-955.
  6. David, F. Comparison of two wound contact layers in acute wounds. Poster presentation at Journées Cicatrisations conference, Paris, France, 2017.
  7. Meaume S, et al. A study to compare a new self-adherent soft silicone dressing with a self-adherent polymer dressing in stage II pressure ulcers. Ostomy Wound Manage. 2003;49(9):44-51.
  8. Feili F, et al. Retention capacity. Poster presentation at EWMA Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, 14-16 May 2008.
  9. Wiberg AB, et al. Preventing maceration with a soft silicone dressing: in-vitro evaluations. Poster presented at the 3rd Congress of WUWHS, Toronto, Canada. 4-8 June 2008.
  10. Williams, C. Mepitel: a non-adherent soft silicone wound dressing. Br J Nurs 1995; 4: 1, 51-55.

 

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