Ovena Learn / How often should you change a collagen dressing?

Collagen · FAQ

How often should you change a collagen dressing?

The 1–3 day standard, when to change more often, when to change less often, and the signs you have the cadence wrong.

The short answer

Change a collagen wound dressing every 1–3 days for most wounds. Toward the 1-day end if the wound is producing a lot of drainage; toward the 3-day end if it's relatively dry. The secondary cover dressing may need changing more often if it saturates, but the collagen itself can often stay in place across multiple secondary changes.

Why frequency matters

Two things are working when a collagen dressing is on a wound:

  1. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) binding. The collagen is being consumed by the wound's elevated enzymes. This takes hours to days. (See our MMP explainer for the biochemistry.)
  2. Scaffolding for new tissue. Fibroblasts and capillaries are attaching to the collagen matrix and growing through it. Disturbing the dressing physically disrupts this fragile new tissue.

Change too often and you interrupt both processes. Change too rarely and the dressing is fully consumed before it can keep doing its job, plus the wound bed risks bacterial overgrowth in a saturated environment. The 1–3 day window balances both.

The standard 1–3 day schedule

Most wound care protocols default to every 2 days as the baseline. From there, adjust based on the wound's specific behavior.

A reasonable starting cadence by wound type:

  • Diabetic foot ulcer: every 1–2 days (higher drainage, higher infection vigilance)
  • Pressure injury, stage 2: every 2–3 days
  • Pressure injury, stage 3–4: every 1–2 days (typically more drainage)
  • Post-Mohs site: every 2–3 days (low drainage)
  • Surgical wound healing open: every 1–2 days (variable drainage)
  • Donor site: every 2–3 days
  • Venous leg ulcer: every 1–2 days under compression bandaging

When to change MORE often (closer to every 24 hours)

  • Heavy drainage that saturates the secondary dressing. If you'd typically change at 48 hours but the secondary is fully wet by 12 hours, your wound needs more absorbency, or a different dressing strategy. Talk to your clinician about adding a foam secondary or upgrading from collagen sheet to powder.
  • Suspected mild infection. Increased exudate, slight odor, mild surrounding redness. Increased frequency lets you inspect the wound more often and catch worsening. (If there's confirmed infection, fever, spreading redness, foul discharge, see when to call a clinician.)
  • The wound is in a high-friction or high-movement area (elbow, knee, foot in a shoe). Dressings shift and lift more often.

When to change LESS often (toward every 3 days)

  • Low-drainage wound with intact secondary dressing. If the secondary is still dry and well-adhered at the 48-hour mark, you can usually go to 72 hours.
  • Quiet, healing wound in proliferation phase. Once the wound is closing and granulation tissue is filling in nicely, longer intervals avoid disturbing the new tissue.
  • Donor sites or post-Mohs sites without complications. These low-drainage sites are well-suited to the longer end of the window.

Never go beyond 3 days without changing the collagen primary. Even on a quiet wound, after 72 hours the collagen is largely consumed and the bacterial colonization risk rises.

Signs you've got the cadence wrong

Signs you're changing too often

  • Granulation tissue looks chronically friable (bleeds at every change)
  • Healing has plateaued despite consistent technique
  • You're burning through dressings, typical use is 2–3 per week per wound

Signs you're not changing often enough

  • Secondary dressing is saturated and possibly leaking
  • The collagen has fully gelled and pooled, meaning it was consumed earlier in the interval
  • Odor at change time (mild ammonia smell is normal; foul smell is not)
  • Surrounding skin shows maceration (white, soft, soggy skin around the wound edge), too much moisture sitting too long

Cost implications

This isn't trivial, collagen dressings cost money. At 2–3 dressings per week, a single Ovena 5-pack of 4×4 dressings ($26.99) lasts about 12–17 days. At one dressing per day, the same pack lasts 5 days.

The math is: changing daily when every-other-day would do roughly doubles your collagen cost. Over a 12-week healing course on a stalled DFU, that's the difference between ~$160 of collagen and ~$320 of collagen. Most patients err on the side of changing too often. Don't.

If you're regularly going through more than 4 dressings a week, that's either a wound that needs a different strategy (different dressing type, clinician consultation), or a cadence that's too aggressive.

Always defer to your wound care clinician's specific protocol. The standard cadence above is a starting point. Wound clinicians personalize based on wound depth, drainage, infection status, comorbidities, and how the wound is responding. If your clinician told you to change at a different interval than what's described here, follow their guidance, they're seeing your specific wound.

Stock the right amount

For a typical chronic wound on the 2-day cadence, plan for one Ovena 5-pack every 1.5 weeks. Subscribe & Save for 10% off and free shipping.

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Frequently asked questions

Why not change it every day?
Each change physically disturbs the new tissue forming on the wound bed. More frequent changes also burn through dressings faster (worse for your wallet) and don't speed healing, in fact they may slow it. Stick to 1–3 days unless the secondary dressing saturates.
My secondary dressing is wet, do I need to change the collagen too?
Not necessarily. The collagen primary can stay if it's still in good contact with the wound bed and there are no signs of infection. Change just the saturated secondary dressing and check the collagen, replace it only if it's lifted or fully gelled.
Should I change more often for a diabetic foot ulcer?
Not necessarily faster, but the change should always be done with your wound clinician's protocol in mind. DFUs have higher infection risk and need more thorough wound assessment at each change, but the change frequency itself usually stays at the standard 1–3 days unless drainage is heavy.
What if I forget and a dressing stays on for 4–5 days?
It's unlikely to cause harm in most cases, but inspect the wound thoroughly when you do change it. Look for signs of infection (foul odor, hot/red surrounding skin, fever). If the wound looks worse than at the last change, see your clinician.
DC
Reviewed by Dr. David Chahine, MD Board-certified physician specializing in wound care. Reviewed for clinical accuracy on May 19, 2026. Educational content only.

Sources

  1. Brett DW. A Review of Collagen and Collagen-Based Wound Dressings. Wounds. 2008;20(12):347-356.
  2. WOCN Society. Guideline for the Prevention and Management of Pressure Ulcers (Injuries). 2022.
  3. EWMA Document: Identifying criteria for wound infection. European Wound Management Association, 2024 update.