When to Use Sanovaden
Use Sanovaden on your wound, bedsore, or ulcer.
A wound is a break in the skin. In general most wounds are usually caused by cuts, punctures or scrapes. Different kinds of wounds may be treated differently from one another, depending upon how they happened and how serious they are. People with diabetes or circulation problems often have wounds and foot ulcers that are very hard to control such as these. Diabetic ulcers that are not well controlled can lead to amputation.
However, it is typical that most simple wounds heal without any special treatment.
Nevertheless under any circumstances it is best to start Sanovaden for immediate first aid whenever you develop on a cut, scrape, burn, or bite. This will reduce or prevent the potential for a bacterial type infection such a MRSA, VRE or Staph.
Sanovaden may also be used when wounds that are chronic, recurring, and have been hard to treat. Healing is a normal response to an injury that hat sets into motion a sequence of events. With the exception of bone, all tissues heal with some scarring. The object of proper care is to minimize the possibility of infection and scarring.
There are basically 4 phases to the healing process:
Sanovaden is provides anti-bacterial management during each of the 4 healing phases.
- Inflammatory Phase: The inflammatory phase begins with the injury itself. Here you have bleeding, immediate narrowing of the blood vessels, clot formation, and release of various chemical substances into the wound that will begin the healing process. Specialized cells clear the wound of debris over the course of several days.
Sanovaden cleanses the wound of debris and reduces the potential for infections
- Proliferation Phase: The proliferative phase in which a matrix or latticework of cells forms. New skin cells and blood vessels form. It is the new small blood vessels that give a healing wound its pink or purple-red appearance. These new blood vessels will supply the rebuilding cells with oxygen and nutrients to sustain the growth of the new cells.
Sanovaden’s continued anti-bacterial activity supports an infection free environment allowing for the production of proteins, primarily collagen. The collagen acts as the framework upon which the new tissues build.
- Remodeling Phase: This begins after 2-3 weeks. The framework (collagen) becomes more organized making the tissue stronger. The blood vessel density becomes less, and the wound begins to lose its pinkish color. Over the course of 6 months, the area increases in strength, eventually reaching 70% of the strength of uninjured skin.
Sanovaden supports new skin cell growth in this phase, It is known that infection inhibits or destroys the growth of new skin cells. Sanovaden, (by allowing for a bacteria free environment) normalizes the skins production of proteins, primarily collagen.
- Epithelialization Phase: This is the process of laying down new skin, or cells. The skin forms a protective barrier between the outer environment and the body. Its primary purpose is to protect the newly formed skin cells. Reconstruction of this layer begins within a few hours of the injury. Open wounds may take 7-10 days because the inflammatory process is prolonged, which contributes to scarring.
Sanovaden free flows into the wound adding a second layer or barrier to protect new skin cell growth against bacteria. The natural ingredients in Sanovaden have been widely studied for their effect in reducing inflammation.
Anytime a wound is:
- non-responsive
- or has failed to show progress in 2 weeks
- or does heal completely in 6 weeks
You may need the expertise of a wound care specialist at a wound care center. We ALWAYS recommend seeing your physician or health care provider in cases such a this
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