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The Cochrane Database of Systematic... 2000Leg ulcers affect up to 1 per cent of people at some time in their life. Management includes care of the ulcer using dressings and treatment of underlying medical... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
Leg ulcers affect up to 1 per cent of people at some time in their life. Management includes care of the ulcer using dressings and treatment of underlying medical problems such as malnutrition, lack of minerals, vitamins, poor blood supply or infection.
OBJECTIVES
To assess the effectiveness of oral zinc in healing arterial or venous leg ulcers.
SEARCH STRATEGY
Searches of 19 databases, hand searching of journals and conference proceedings from 1948 onwards, and examination of bibliographies. The company manufacturing zinc sulphate tablets was asked for references to relevant trials.
SELECTION CRITERIA
Randomised controlled trials comparing oral zinc sulphate with placebo or no treatment in patients with arterial or venous leg ulcers. There was no restriction on date or language. The main outcome measure used was complete healing of the ulcers. Trials were eligible for inclusion if they measured ulcer healing objectively, by time to complete healing, proportion of ulcers healed during the study, or healing rates of ulcers.
DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS
All data extraction and assessment of trial quality were done by both authors independently.
MAIN RESULTS
There were six eligible trials. All are small and serum zinc was measured at baseline or during the trial in 4 trials. Overall there is no evidence of a beneficial effect of treatment with zinc sulphate on the number of ulcers healed at the end of the trials. There is some evidence that oral zinc might have a beneficial effect on healing of venous ulcers in people with a 'low' serum zinc level at baseline.
REVIEWER'S CONCLUSIONS
Overall, oral zinc sulphate does not appear to aid healing of leg ulcers, although it might be beneficial in those with venous leg ulcers and low serum zinc. Further research is needed to ascertain the serum zinc concentration below which treatment with zinc might be beneficial, and the dose required. [This abstract was prepared centrally]
Topics: Administration, Oral; Humans; Leg Ulcer; Zinc; Zinc Sulfate
PubMed: 10796629
DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD001273 -
Journal of Tissue Viability Jan 1999
Review
Topics: Administration, Oral; Astringents; Chronic Disease; Evidence-Based Medicine; Humans; Leg Ulcer; Research Design; Treatment Outcome; Wound Healing; Zinc Sulfate
PubMed: 10480980
DOI: 10.1016/s0965-206x(99)80006-0 -
Archives of Dermatology Dec 1998To determine whether oral zinc sulfate is an effective treatment for promoting healing of venous or arterial leg ulcers. (Clinical Trial)
Clinical Trial Randomized Controlled Trial Review
OBJECTIVE
To determine whether oral zinc sulfate is an effective treatment for promoting healing of venous or arterial leg ulcers.
DATA SOURCES
The search strategy of the Cochrane Wounds Group was used. This includes searches of electronic databases, conference proceedings, relevant bibliographies, and hand searching of journals.
STUDY SELECTION
Studies were included if they were randomized controlled trials of oral zinc sulfate in the treatment of chronic venous or arterial ulcers with objective measures of healing. Six of the 10 studies initially identified were included in the review.
DATA EXTRACTION
The trial method, participants, interventions, outcomes, baseline comparability, adequate reporting of withdrawals, and blinding of assessment were extracted by 2 reviewers independently.
DATA SYNTHESIS
No trial showed a statistically significant benefit of zinc sulfate for healing leg ulcers. There is limited evidence to suggest that zinc might increase healing in individuals with a low serum zinc level, but more evidence is needed.
CONCLUSIONS
There is no evidence of benefit from the general use of zinc sulfate in patients with chronic leg ulcers. There is a need for further research to see if oral zinc sulfate is beneficial in the treatment of patients with leg ulcers who have a low serum zinc level. If it is demonstrated to be beneficial, further trials are required to establish dose and duration of treatment.
Topics: Astringents; Humans; Leg Ulcer; Zinc Sulfate
PubMed: 9875193
DOI: 10.1001/archderm.134.12.1556