Research Article

Redox Profiling Reveals Clear Differences between Molecular Patterns of Wound Fluids from Acute and Chronic Wounds

Table 1

Clinical data of patients involved in this study.

Patient IDGenderAgeWound typeWound persisted forTotal wound area (cm2)

Patient data
1.f85Chronic venous3 years96
2.f70Chronic venous6 years378
3.m54Chronic venous5 years656
4.f60Chronic venous4 years56
5.m82Chronic venous3 years327.5
6.m69Chronic venous40 years750
7.f70Chronic venous4 years447
8.m83Chronic venous20 years318
9.m66Chronic venous3 years18
10.m52Chronic venous9 months104
11.f82Chronic venous2 years116
12.f40Chronic venous4 years56
13.f70Chronic venous20 years32
14.f68Chronic venous4 years60
15.m65Chronic venous1.5 years180
16.m46Chronic venous3 years300
17.m52Chronic diabetic6 months80
18.m68Chronic diabetic1 month36
19.f81Chronic diabetic4 years148
20.f44Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours1500
21.f61Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours225
22.m42Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours1800
23.m68Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours3000
24.m17Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours1950
25.m47Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours150
26.f71Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours300
27.f77Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours2250
28.m31Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours1500
29.f18Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours1500
30.m23Acute (2nd degree burn)<4hours3750

Thirty patients were enrolled in the study; 19 with chronic leg ulcers and 11 patients with second degree burns. In the chronic wound group, 16 patients had venous ulcers and 3 had diabetic ulcers. Clinical data (age, sex, wound type, persistence, and total area of wounds) are presented.