GATWICK, United Kingdom - Saturday, July 14th 2012 [ME NewsWire]
-(BUSINESS WIRE)-- There couldn't be a better time to talk about what Team Sky's Dr Richard Freeman calls "wound management.“
Mark Cavendish sympathetically tweeting pictures of his pal Bernie Eisel
being patched up in the hotel room after last Wednesday's Tour de
France Stage 4 crash in Rouen was a good reminder if we needed one that
professional bike racing is hard on the riders, especially when they hit
the deck at 60kph.
Indeed, according to Dr Richard Freeman, 2012 has already been an
unfortunate vintage year for the team and the kind of classic injuries
that cyclists earn when they slide fast across tarmac with nothing on
their hips, elbows and shoulders but a Lycra-based layer. "Road rash" is
what every cyclist calls the painful and distinctive injuries that
result, but Dr Freeman thinks that the special wound dressings made by
Team Sky supplier Systagenix are providing an advantage for the team
when they do arise, helping road rash to heal faster and getting the
team riders back in action and performing comfortably, sooner.
"The ADAPTIC TOUCH® dressing made by Systagenix has been one that we
have used an awful lot," said Dr Freeman. "It is a non-adhering
specialised dressing that has a soothing effect. We started using it in
Majorca and we’ve got through a lot since then, as we seem to have had a
lot of crashes so far this year."
"No matter how bad the wounds are these dressings have coped remarkably
well," he went on. "Patient confidentiality prevents me from giving
details on specific riders, but I can say that the riders who have used
them have found them much more comfortable than other dressings they
have used in the past. The other main benefit is that they don’t need to
be changed as often."
In fact, other teams have been showing an interest in the dressings,
initially because of the novel appearance without the traditional heavy
webbing but later for better reasons as word quickly spread that they
really do help wounds heal faster.
"I think we’ve moved things on a great deal thanks to the partnership
with Systagenix," said Dr Freeman. "We’ve been very impressed. We first
came into contact with them at British Cycling, but we’ve stepped things
up to a new level with Team Sky," explained the doctor. "We’ve tapped
into their knowledge of healthcare and gained some huge benefits from
that already. We were particularly interested in some of the dressings
that they produce to treat burns and ulcers, because some of the
crash-related injuries that riders get are similar in some ways to
those.“
"They’ve got an awful lot of hospital research behind them and we’re looking at using some of their other products as well.”
To get technical, Dr Freeman explained that injured Team Sky riders are
treated with "two-phase wound management, from Systagenix' Let’s
Comfort® range – one of the four categories of their Let’s Heal®
approach to healing." The riders have ADAPTIC TOUCH® dressings applied
to the wound initially. The soft-tack silicone coating means that the
dressing can be applied easily and, more importantly, removed without
damaging the wound. The mesh design also helps minimise damage to the
wound during removal as fluid is able to pass through to the secondary
dressing, reducing the chances of what Dr Freeman and the medics
alarmingly call "maceration." The mesh’s extremely small pores also help
prevent the secondary dressing sticking to the wound, which also saves
damage to the wound on removal.
Finally, the Systagenix TIELLE® Lite dressings complete the healing
process. "The TIELLE® dressing has been one of the mainstays for us this
season," said Dr Freeman. "It only needs to stay on for three days and
during that time it draws the fluid out of a wound, making the healing
process much quicker. Combining that with the ADAPTIC TOUCH® dressings
speeds up the whole healing process. There are three types of TIELLE®
dressing. We use the TIELLE® Lite as that suits the type of road rash
wounds cyclists tend to get. It’s almost as if it had been designed for
cyclists in terms of its ease of use and effectiveness.“
Needless to say, Dr Richard Freeman and the other team doctors, as well
as the riders themselves, will be hoping that's the end of their
injuries for this Tour de France but it's reassuring for everyone to
know that even in the unthinkable field of sports injuries there are
marginal performance gains to be made.
Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=50336965&lang=en
Contacts
VSPR for Systagenix
Vicky Stoakes, +44-(0)7747-534-519
vicky@vs-pr.com
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