Primary Intention - The Clean Cut
- Healing of a clean, uninfected surgical wound where edges are precisely apposed.
- Characterized by minimal tissue loss and a fine, linear scar.

⭐ Wound tensile strength is only ~10% of normal skin at 1 week, increasing to ~70-80% by 3 months, but never regaining 100% strength.
Secondary Intention - Healing Naturally
- Mechanism: Wound is left open to heal from the base up. Relies on the body's natural healing capacity.
- Process: Involves significant granulation tissue formation, followed by wound contraction and epithelialization.
- Indications:
- Contaminated or infected wounds (e.g., abscess cavities).
- Wounds with significant tissue loss (e.g., deep ulcers, burns).
- When approximation of edges is not feasible.
- Outcome: Slower healing, more inflammation and a larger, more prominent scar compared to primary intention.
⭐ High-Yield Fact: Wound contraction, a key feature of secondary healing, is primarily mediated by myofibroblasts.

Tertiary Intention - The Waiting Game
Also known as delayed primary closure (DPC). The wound is intentionally left open-typically for 4-7 days-to allow for initial drainage, debridement, and granulation, before being formally closed.
- Goal: Reduce bacterial load in heavily contaminated wounds.
- Indications:
- Grossly contaminated wounds (e.g., trauma, foreign bodies).
- Animal or human bites.
- Abscess cavities after incision and drainage.

⭐ Tertiary intention combines the initial phase of healing by secondary intention with a final closure by primary intention, resulting in less scarring than secondary intention alone.
Grafts & Flaps - The Reinforcements
-
Grafts: Tissue transferred without its own blood supply, relying on the recipient bed for neovascularization.
- Split-Thickness (STSG): Epidermis & partial dermis. Good for large areas; prone to contraction.
- Full-Thickness (FTSG): Epidermis & entire dermis. Better cosmesis, less contraction; requires a well-vascularized bed.
-
Flaps: Tissue transferred with its intact blood supply. Essential for covering avascular structures (bone, tendon).
- Random Pattern: Blood supply from the subdermal plexus. Length-to-width ratio is critical (e.g., < 3:1).
- Axial Pattern: Incorporates a named direct cutaneous artery.
- Free Flap: Tissue and its vessels are detached and reanastomosed to vessels at the recipient site.
⭐ The most common cause of flap failure is venous thrombosis, leading to congestion and subsequent arterial compromise.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Primary intention involves immediate suture of clean, approximated wound edges, resulting in minimal scarring.
- Secondary intention is for contaminated or large tissue-loss wounds; they are left open to heal via granulation tissue formation.
- Tertiary intention (Delayed Primary Closure) involves cleaning a contaminated wound, waiting 4-7 days for signs of healing, then suturing it closed.
- The key determinant for closure type is the degree of contamination and tissue loss.
- Secondary intention healing is the slowest and results in the most significant scarring.
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