Recurrent and hard-to-heal diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) represent a clinically challenging subgroup with delayed closure and frequent non-response to standard of care (SOC). Impaired local perfusion and superficial tissue hypoxia, commonly attributed to microcirculatory dysfunction, are proposed contributors to impaired wound-bed progression and prolonged healing trajectories in diabetes. Transcutaneous gaseous carbon dioxide (COâ‚‚) therapy is a non-invasive adjunct intervention with a mechanistic rationale to modulate local microcirculation and tissue oxygenation; however, controlled clinical evidence in recurrent, hard-to-heal DFUs remains limited. This prospective, randomized, controlled, open-label, parallel-group clinical investigation compares transcutaneous COâ‚‚ therapy plus SOC versus SOC alone over 4 weeks. The primary objective is to determine whether the proportion of completely healed DFUs at Week 4 differs between groups under a predefined healing confirmation procedure. Key secondary objectives include quantifying changes in superficial tissue oxygenation (StOâ‚‚) using hyperspectral imaging and assessing pain intensity (NPRS). Supportive outcomes include ulcer area reduction metrics and wound-bed appearance in unhealed.
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complete ulcer healing
Timeframe: 4 weeks