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Living with a chronic wound can be painful and exhausting.

It can make even simple things like walking, resting, or spending time with loved ones feel out of reach.

PLASOMA offers a gentle way to help your wound heal. This non-invasive cold plasma therapy supports the natural repair process, to help wounds close faster in a safe manner.

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How PLASOMA works

Healing starts from within, and PLASOMA simply helps your body do what it already knows best.
During each short session, a soft pad is placed over the wound. Inside, PLASOMA creates cold plasma from air. Cold plasma is a gas that fights bacteria and stimulates new tissue growth.

Each treatment takes about two minutes and is completely safe and gentle.

"After my wound existing for 4 years and an amputation being planned, PLASOMA healed my wound in weeks - I got my life back"

Johan van Thull

Backed by real science to help wounds heal

Developed through more than ten years of research. PLASOMA has obtained good results, even in cases where previous treatments have failed to achieve progress.

Interested in PLASOMA therapy?

If your wound is slow to heal, PLASOMA may be an option for you. Our team can help you find out whether treatment is available near you and what to expect during your first visit.

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Would you like to know if PLASOMA could help you?

If you live in the Netherlands and would like to learn more about where PLASOMA treatments are available, please leave your details below. Our team will get in touch to answer your questions and help you find the nearest healthcare organization offering the treatment.

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Do you prefer to contact us directly?
You can also reach our team at contact@plasmacure.nl.

Frequently askedquestions

Here are some of the most common questions about PLASOMA therapy. If you have another question, feel free to contact us.

Improvements in wound healing were shown in multiple studies:

  • Decrease in diabetic foot ulcer size of 55% (median) within 2 weeks [source 1].
  • Wound closure in 60% of chronic wounds, after an average treatment period of 7 weeks [source 2].
  • Wound closure in 47% of hard-to-heal and mostly (severely) infected wounds; all wounds showed substantial reduction in wound size (average 90%) [source 3].
  • Wound closure and wound size reduction in venous leg ulcers [source 4, a randomized controlled trial].

Graph comparing wound healing and surface reduction with PLASOMA treatment versus control over 12 weeks

PLASOMA has also been shown to reduce the number of bacteria (Staphylococcus aureus, in wounds [source 1]; Pseudomonas aeruginosa, on intact skin [source 5]).

Lastly, there are indications that PLASOMA stimulates the microcirculation [source 5 and unpublished data].

Some cases have been detailed in case study reports

The frequency and the number of treatments depends on, among others, the type of chronic wound and the size. Typically, the treatment will be done 1 to 2 times per week for several weeks. PLASOMA cold plasma treatment itself is only 2 minutes.

PLASOMA is CE-certified and available for the market. For product information or to request a product demonstration please contact our sales department via info@plasmacure.nl

PLASOMA cold plasma application is available at multiple wound care centres in the Netherlands and other countries. Send an e-mail to info@plasmacure.nl to receive more information. For other actual information please subscribe to our newsletter.

Plasma is ionized gas, the the so-called 4th stage of matter (1. solid, 2. liquid, 3. gas, 4. plasma). A plasma is created by adding energy to a gas. Plasma is a mix of electrons and ions, reactive species, UV radiation, visible light, electromagnetic fields and heat. Plasma exists in nature, for example the sun, which is so hot that it consists of a hot plasma. With an artificially produced plasma it is possible to keep the temperature low, not much higher than body temperature. We call this a cold plasma, which can be applied in or on the human body.

Cold plasma kills bacteria, even antibiotic resistant ones, and it inactivates bacteria in biofilm. Additionally, it can improve local blood supply (microcirculation) and stimulate cells to grow (cell proliferation) and move (cell migration).

Read more on this topic in the whitepaper ‘Stimulation of wound healing using cold plasma’.

All types of chronic wounds can be treated with cold plasma. For example: diabetic foot wounds, venous leg wounds, bedsores, hard-to-heal burn wounds and infected postoperative wounds.

Worldwide research has shown that cold plasma is safe, kills microorganisms, inactivates biofilm, activates skin cells, and improves local blood supply.
Read more about effects of cold plasma, summarized in the whitepaper ‘Stimulation of wound healing using cold plasma’.

Or go to scientific literature.

Various studies are in progress regarding cold plasma as a treatment for cancer. Cold plasma is also used in dentistry for disinfection and in dermatology.

Worldwide chronic wounds affect 140 million people. In the Netherlands the number of people suffering from chronic wounds is 500.000.

Chronic wounds have a high impact on quality of life and on survival rate. For example, the 5-year survival rate in diabetic foot ulcers is even lower compared to prostate cancer and breast cancer. Also chronic wounds result in amputations in 15% of the diabetic foot ulcers and 5% of the venous leg ulcers.

On average, non-healing wound costs €13.500 per year.

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