The Limited Access Dressing (LAD) combines the principles of moist wound healing and topical
negative pressure dressing along with a provision of an additional port (12-14 FR size tube) for instilling antimicrobial
solution/gas of choice (to make
wound environment aerobic/anaerobic) without any need to change the dressing. The efficacy of the dressing technique was proven by a study of 39 cases, including 12 cases with exposed bone and tendon (July 2004 to March 2005) where
wounds were prepared by LAD II and split-thickness
skin grafting with LAD II. Efficacy of LAD was assessed by observing the time to development of healthy granulation tissue and by the quantity of graft take under LAD by day 10. For the
wounds studied, an average of 1.51 LAD (range 1-3) was required to develop granulation tissue fit for
skin grafting. The average number of days required to prepare the
wound under LAD was 17.05 days. An average of 1.03 LAD was required for covering the
wound with skin graft (range 1 to 2; median 1) and overall graft take under LAD was 99.87%. In 24 of 39
wounds, an average of 33.83 days of treatment with conventional dressing (range 7 to 120 days; median 22.5 days) could not achieve healthy granulation. When these
wounds were switched to LAD,
wound preparation took an average of 13.2 days (range 3 to 32 days; median 12 days). It was concluded that LAD is a safe and effective alternative to conventional dressing methods..