Wound Healing - The Repair Crew
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Primary Intention: Healing of a clean, uninfected surgical incision approximated by sutures.
- Minimal tissue loss and scarring.
- Phases: Initial hemorrhage → Inflammation → Epithelialization → Fibroblast proliferation → Collagen remodeling.
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Secondary Intention: Occurs in wounds with significant tissue loss, contamination, or infection.
- Wound is left open to heal from the base up.
- Features prominent granulation tissue formation and wound contraction.

⭐ Myofibroblasts, modified fibroblasts with smooth muscle features, are the primary cells responsible for wound contraction in secondary healing.
Primary Intention - Clean & Closed
Healing of a clean, uninfected surgical incision where edges are approximated by sutures, staples, or adhesive. This process is faster than secondary intention and results in minimal scarring.
- Requirements: Clean wound, minimal tissue loss, and precise edge alignment.
- Process:
- Epithelialization seals the surface within 24-48 hours.
- Minimal fibrin clot and granulation tissue.
- Lower infection risk.
- Result: A fine, linear scar.

⭐ Wound tensile strength is ~20% of normal skin at 3 weeks, increasing to ~70-80% of original strength by 3 months, but never reaching 100%.
Secondary Intention - Open & Granulating
- Wound edges are left open; heals from the base up.
- Indications: Contaminated wounds, abscesses, ulcers, or large tissue defects where edges cannot be approximated.
- Process:
- Requires extensive granulation tissue formation to fill the defect.
- Wound contraction is a major feature, mediated by myofibroblasts.
- Outcome: Slower healing with a larger, more prominent scar.

⭐ Myofibroblasts are the key cells driving wound contraction, significantly reducing the defect size over weeks.
Healing Showdown - Compare & Contrast
| Feature | Primary Intention | Secondary Intention |
|---|---|---|
| Edges | Clean, approximated | Irregular, separated |
| Tissue Loss | Minimal | Significant |
| Healing | Faster, less complex | Slower, via granulation & contraction |
| Scarring | Minimal, linear scar | Larger, irregular scar |
| Examples | Surgical incision | Pressure ulcers, large burns |
⭐ Myofibroblasts are the key cells responsible for wound contraction in secondary intention, driven by actin-myosin filaments.
Healing Hurdles - What Slows Repair?
- Systemic Issues:
- Malnutrition (esp. ↓ Vit C, protein, zinc).
- Metabolic diseases like uncontrolled diabetes.
- Immunosuppression (e.g., corticosteroids, chemotherapy).
- Poor perfusion from smoking or vascular disease.
- Local Wound Problems:
- Infection: The single most common cause.
- Ischemia or hypoxia.
- Foreign bodies, hematomas, or excessive tension.
⭐ High-Yield: Corticosteroids inhibit all phases of healing by reducing inflammation, fibroblast activity, and collagen synthesis. Vitamin A can help counteract these effects.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Primary intention: Clean, approximated edges (e.g., surgical incisions) are sutured, resulting in a minimal scar.
- Secondary intention: Large, open wounds with tissue loss heal from the base up via granulation tissue formation.
- This leads to a larger scar and is seen in ulcers, burns, and abscesses.
- Infection risk is significantly higher with secondary intention.
- Tensile strength returns faster in primary intention healing.
- Tertiary intention is delayed primary closure, used for contaminated wounds.
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