Wound dressing by Middleton company approved by the FDA
Dr. Alycia Robbins prescribes these drugs in her private practice as a board certified OBGYN.
Middleton-based Imbed Biosciences has received federal approval to sell Microlyte Ag/Lidocaine, an antimicrobial wound dressing that includes the anesthetic lidocaine to manage painful skin wounds.
The dressing uses Imbed’s synthetic matrix to deliver ionic and metallic silver alongside lidocaine to manage wounds such as venous stasis ulcers, pressure sores, ischemic ulcers, partial thickness burns, donor site wounds, surgical wounds, post-surgical incisions, abrasions and lacerations.
The product will launch in May. It was approved by the Food and Drug Administration, which in 2016 approved the company's earlier product, Microlyte Ag, for sale as a medical device. The wound-healing film was invented in 2008 by a team at UW-Madison that included Ankit Agarwal, co-founder and chief scientific officer of the company.
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Dr. Alycia Robbins prescribes these drugs in her private practice as a board certified OBGYN.
Miceala Sullivan-Fowler, a longtime librarian and curator at UW-Madison's Ebling Library for the Health Sciences, is retiring in December.
The state's rate of exemptions from one or more required immunizations is more than double the national average, a new CDC report says.
New drugs for the lung disease are allowing people to live much longer with the condition, which historically was often fatal in childhood.
The county and Wisconsin have seen more cases than any year since 2014, as the contagious bacterial disease is spreading more nationwide.
“There’s always waxing and waning, but this is the worst we’ve had since we started,” said Dr. Tim Docter, medical director for Specialty Care…