Skip to main content

3M™ V.A.C.® Peel and Place Dressing Kit

3M™ V.A.C.® Peel and Place Dressing is the first 3M™ V.A.C.® Therapy Dressing that can be worn for up to seven days with an average application time less than two minutes. Available in multiple sizes.

Visit Product Website
Product Videos
Product Literature

Solventum

3M Health Care is now Solventum, a health care company built from a legacy of innovation and dedicated to enabling better, smarter, safer health care to improve lives.
Toll free:(800) 228-3957 Fax:(800) 728-0959 Website: www.solventum.com
Benefits

• Create an environment that promotes wound healing for your patients with the all-in-one integrated NPWT dressing that covers the wound bed and periwound skin 
• Use the 3M™ V.A.C.® Peel and Place Dressing Kit with a V.A.C.® Therapy Unit to promote wound healing, increase granulation tissue formation and prepare the wound for closure 
• Application of negative pressure and the V.A.C.® Peel and Place Dressing removes exudate and infections materials, reduces edema, promotes perfusion, induces deep tissue micro-deformation and stimulates cellular activity

Indications

The 3M™ V.A.C.® Peel and Place Dressing is intended to be applied in an acute, extended, or home care setting where product application is conducted by or under the supervision of a qualified health care professional. It is an accessory to the 3M™ Negative Pressure Wound Therapy System.
When used on open wounds, the system is intended to create an environment that promotes wound healing by secondary or tertiary (delayed primary) intention by preparing the wound bed for closure, reducing edema, promoting granulation tissue formation and perfusion, and by removing exudate and infectious material. Open wound types include: chronic, acute, traumatic, subacute and dehisced wounds, partial-thickness burns, ulcers (such as diabetic, pressure or venous insufficiency), flaps and grafts.

Contraindications

Do not place foam dressings of the 3M™ V.A.C.® Therapy System directly in contact with exposed blood vessels, anastomotic sites, organs or nerves. Note: Refer to Warnings section for additional information concerning Bleeding.
3M™ V.A.C.® Therapy is contraindicated for patients with:
• Malignancy in the wound
• Untreated osteomyelitis
Note: Refer to Warnings section for Osteomyelitis information.
• Non-enteric and unexplored fistulas
• Necrotic tissue with eschar present
Note: After debridement of necrotic tissue and complete removal of eschar, 3M™ V.A.C.® Therapy may be used.

Warnings and Precautions

Refer to Instructions for Use for complete list of Warnings and Precautions.

Storage Requirements

Keep dry.

How Supplied/Sizing
Small, medium, large.
HCPCS Code
Product features
cancel Acrylic adhesive drape
cancel Adhesive border dressing
cancel Alternative interface dressing
cancel Antimicrobial
cancel Compatible w/ topicals
cancel Flat drain kit
check_circle Foam interface dressing
cancel Gauze interface dressing
cancel Interface intact when saturated
cancel Kit components available separately
cancel Moisture vapor permeable interface
cancel Round drain kit
check_circle Silicone acrylic adhesive drape
cancel Usable on closed wounds
check_circle Usable on open wounds
Other features
check_circle Educational Material Available
check_circle Free Samples/Trials Available
check_circle Published Clinical Article Available
Recommended Use

Acute Wounds 
Burns 
Chronic Wounds 
Dehisced Wounds 
Diabetic Foot 
Granulating/Epithelializing Wounds 
Moderate/Highly Exudating Wounds 
Non/Minimally Exudating Wounds 
Pressure Ulcers 
Skin Flaps 
Skin Grafts 
Superficial Wounds 
Traumatic Wounds 
Venous Ulcers 
 

Mode of Use/Application

Refer to Instructions for Use for complete dressing application instructions.

Removal & Change Frequency

In a monitored, non-infected wound, 3M™V.A.C.® Peel and Place Dressings may be left in place for up to 7 days with the frequency adjusted by the clinician as appropriate. Infected wounds must be monitored often and very closely. For these wounds, dressings may need to be changed more often; the dressing change intervals should be based on a continuing evaluation of wound condition and the patient’s clinical presentation, rather than a fixed schedule.

Clinically Tested

Latex-friendly

No posters match your selected filters. Remove some filtres, or reset them and start again.

Have a product to submit?

Be included in the most comprehensive wound care products directory
and online database.
Learn More