Utilization of powder preparations containing...

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Designated organic active ingredient containing – Having -c- – wherein x is chalcogen – bonded directly to...

Reexamination Certificate

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Reexamination Certificate

active

06534528

ABSTRACT:

DESCRIPTION
This application is a national stage filing under 35 U.S.C. §371 of international application No. PCT/EP99/00105, filed on Jan. 11, 1999.
The use of hydroxypyridone-containing powder preparations for the treatment of leg ulcers and pressure ulcers.
The present invention relates to the use of a powder preparation containing hydroxypyridones for the treatment of leg ulcers (ulcus cruris) and pressure ulcers (decubitus ulcers).
The diagnosis of leg ulcers (ulcus cruris) is a collective term covering ulcers of varying origins (Phlebologie (1996); 25: 254-258). In Germany, about 1.6 million people are affected by poorly healing leg ulcers. The prerequisite for effective treatment of the ulcus cruris wound is to identify the possible causes of the development of the defect. It is possible to make the global statement of blood flow in the vessels of the lower leg is disturbed. The undersupply of the tissue with oxygen resulting from this leads to lesions, loss of tissue and finally necrosis and expansion of the defect. Infections with bacteria and fungi colonize the affected areas of skin and, in addition to enlarging the wound, also contribute to the formation of a very malodorous discharge.
The therapy of ulcus cruris consists of a dual strategy of local wound treatment and elimination of the causes of the ulceration. The latter may include compression therapy for an ulcer caused by chronic venous hypertension as well as rehabilitation of the arterial system for an arterial ulcus cruris.
It must always be taken into account in principle during local therapy of an ulcer that polypharmacy in use of the agents is avoided where possible because the patients often have multivalent contact allergies, in particular to ingredients of the local therapy which is sometimes applied to them for some years. The composition of local therapeutic agents should therefore be as simple as possible and the number of substances used should be kept as small as possible.
At present 2 treatment methods are accepted for local ulcer therapy, namely a phase-adapted and a phase-overlapping wound treatment.
These therapeutic policies relate to the 3 phases of wound healing, which take place as follows:
Exudation phase
(frequently triggered by superinfection of the ulcer)
Granulation phase
Epithelization phase
Phase-adapted wound healing corresponds to the conventional, traditional therapy, must be continually changed and is elaborate but low-cost. Phase-overlapping therapy, which makes use of modern wound dressings with which treatment in the same way is possible in all 3 phases, is considerably simpler to manage but also considerably more costly. The two methods of therapy are comparable to one another in the therapeutic effect.
Phase-adapted wound treatment intervenes in the 3 phases of wound healing as follows:
Cleansing
Promotion of granulation
Promotion of epithelization through drying out
The aim of cleansing is to produce a clean floor of the wound. For this it is necessary firstly to remove ointment residues and scabs and cut away any necroses present. The latter is best performed with a sharp spoon and with forceps and scissors. It is also possible to use enzymatic ointments which preferably degrade denatured protein. They contain substances such as trypsin, chymotrypsin, collagenase, fibrolysin, streptokinase etc. The surroundings of the ulcers should always be protected by applying hard zinc paste during this. Regular disinfection takes place in parallel with this, for example with potassium permanganate or Rivanol® baths.
Use of local antibiotics should be avoided because, on the one hand, resistance development and, on the other hand, the rate of sensitization is high. Granulation is promoted by mechanical stimulation. This is why curettage with a sharp spoon is still a very successful remedy. Somewhat milder stimulation of the floor of the wound is possible with sea sand, crystallized sugar or dextran powder. Hypertonic glucose and sodium chloride solutions also promote granulation. The treatments which were formerly customary with ointments, dyes and refined mineral oils are no longer recommended because on prolonged use they not infrequently lead to contact allergies.
The aim in the epithelization phase is to protect the sensitive newly formed tissue and promote epithelization. Epithelization starts when the granulation tissue has reached the upper level of the skin. Suitable as epithelization-promoting wound dressing are a number of products, for example hydrogels, hydrocolloids, foam compresses and gauze lattices. Transplantation of split skin can also be performed.
In phase-overlapping wound treatment for example dry wound dressings and gels (xerodressing and xerogel), and hydrocolloid wound dressings (hydrocolloid dressings) are used. They display their effect in each phase and can be employed as monotherapy for the treatment of ulcus cruris. Their properties include exudate retention, ulcer cleansing and promotion of granulation and epithelization.
According to publications from England, Denmark, Canada, Sweden, South Africa and the USA, 1 to 11% of all patients in hospitals had decubitus ulcers: the causation of this involves increasing life expectancy, the increase in patients at risk, and the fact that increasing numbers of extremely ill and seriously injured patients survive. Additional factors are the increasing shortage of nursing staff and the continuous overwork thereof.
Pressure maintained for a lengthy period on the skin with a disturbance of the microcirculation is the most important factor leading to a pressure ulcer (National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (1989)). An important part is also played by shear forces acting on the skin and the underlying tissue, and friction and moisture. A decrease in patient mobility means more long-lasting stress on the skin at the same point. In the supine position, this is particularly the sacral region of the skin. Patients at particular risk of pressure ulcers are therefore elderly ones who are immobile, whose blood flow is impaired or who suffer from neurological disorders. Besides relieving the pressure on the affected areas of skin, the local treatment of decubitus ulcers is carried out in principle in the same way as for leg ulcers.
It has now been found that powder preparations of hydroxypyridone derivatives are extremely suitable for simple and cost-effective phase-overlapping local therapy of leg ulcers and pressure ulcers. This finding is surprising inasmuch as hydroxypyridone-containing preparations have to date been used exclusively as antimicrobial agents.
The invention therefore relates to the use of powder and at least one compound of the formula I
in which R
1
, R
2
and R
3
, which are identical or different, are hydrogen atom or alkyl with 1-4 carbon atoms, and R
4
is a saturated hydrocarbon radical with 6 to 9 carbon atoms or a radical of the formula II
where
X is S or O,
Y is hydrogen atom or up to 2 halogen atoms such as chlorine and/or bromine,
Z is a single bond or the divalent radicals O, S, —CR
2
—, in which R is hydrogen or C
1
-C
4
-alkyl, or other divalent radicals with 2-10 C and, where appropriate, O and/or S atoms linked in the form of a chain, it being necessary—if the radicals contain 2 or more O and/or S atoms—for the latter to be separated from one another by at least 2 C atoms, and it also being possible for 2 adjacent C atoms to be linked together by a double bond, and the free valencies of the C atoms being saturated by H and/or C
1
-C
4
-alkyl groups,
Ar is an aromatic ring system which has up to two rings and which may be substituted by up to three radicals from the group of fluorine, chlorine, bromine, methoxy, C
1
-C
4
-alkyl, trifluoromethyl and trifluoromethoxy, for the production of a pharmaceutical for the treatment of leg ulcers and/or decubitus ulcers.
The term “saturated hydrocarbon radical” means that the radical can be straight-chain, branched or cyclic and contains no aliphatic multiple bonds. Examples of the R
4
radical are hexyl, heptyl, octyl, cyclohexyl or cycloheptyl.
The

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