Wound care principles

Wound care principles

Wound care principles

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Phases of Healing - The Repair Crew

Collagen Cross-Talk: The transition from pliable Type III collagen (granulation tissue) to strong Type I collagen is critical for wound strength. Deficiencies in this process (e.g., vitamin C, copper) lead to poor healing and dehiscence.

Wound Classification - Sorting the Damage

  • Class I (Clean):
    • Uninfected, no inflammation; tracts not entered.
    • Examples: Hernia repair, breast biopsy.
    • SSI Risk: <2%.
  • Class II (Clean-Contaminated):
    • Respiratory, GI, or GU tracts entered under controlled conditions.
    • Examples: Elective cholecystectomy, lung resection.
    • SSI Risk: 3-5%.
  • Class III (Contaminated):
    • Open, fresh accidental wounds or major sterile break (e.g., GI spillage).
    • Examples: Penetrating trauma, inflamed appendectomy.
    • SSI Risk: 5-15%.
  • Class IV (Dirty/Infected):
    • Existing clinical infection (pus) or perforated viscera.
    • Examples: Abscess I&D, perforated diverticulitis.
    • SSI Risk: >15% (up to 40%).

⭐ This classification is a key predictor of Surgical Site Infection (SSI) risk and directly guides the use of prophylactic antibiotics.

Wound Management - The Clean-Up Job

  • Goal: Create a clean, moist, and protected environment for healing.
  • Initial Steps: Hemostasis, irrigation (isotonic saline), and assessment.
  • Debridement: Removal of necrotic/foreign material.
    • Autolytic: Uses body's own enzymes (e.g., hydrocolloids).
    • Enzymatic: Topical collagenase.
    • Mechanical: Wet-to-dry dressings, irrigation.
    • Surgical: Sharp debridement for extensive necrosis.

Exam Favorite: Wet-to-dry dressings are a form of mechanical debridement but are non-selective, potentially removing healthy granulation tissue upon removal and causing pain.

Healing Factors & Complications - When Things Go Wrong

  • Systemic Factors Impairing Healing:
    • Nutrition: Deficiencies in Protein, Vitamin C, Zinc.
    • Comorbidities: Diabetes (↓ leukocyte function), PVD (ischemia).
    • Lifestyle: Smoking (vasoconstriction, ↓ O₂), chronic alcohol use.
    • Medications: Corticosteroids, chemotherapy, radiation.
  • Local Factors:
    • Infection: Most common cause of delayed healing.
    • Poor Perfusion/Hypoxia: Inadequate blood supply.
    • Technique: Excessive suture tension, tissue trauma.

Abdominal wound dehiscence post inguinal hernia repair

  • Specific Complications:
    • Dehiscence: Fascial separation.
    • Evisceration: Organ protrusion (surgical emergency).
    • Hypertrophic Scar: Collagen confined to wound boundaries.
    • Keloid: Collagen extends beyond wound; common in darker skin tones.

⭐ A sudden gush of serosanguinous or "salmon-colored" fluid from an incision 5-8 days post-op is a classic sign of impending fascial dehiscence.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Primary intention sutures clean wounds; secondary intention leaves contaminated wounds open to granulate.
  • Wound dehiscence (fascial separation) is a surgical emergency, often preceded by serosanguinous drainage.
  • Staph aureus is the most common pathogen in post-op wound infections.
  • Keep initial surgical dressings clean and dry for 24-48 hours.
  • Healing requires adequate protein, vitamin C, and zinc.
  • Evisceration (organ protrusion) requires immediate OR with sterile saline-soaked dressings.

Practice Questions: Wound care principles

Test your understanding with these related questions

The surgical equipment used during a craniectomy is sterilized using pressurized steam at 121°C for 15 minutes. Reuse of these instruments can cause transmission of which of the following pathogens?

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Flashcards: Wound care principles

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Cutaneous healing by _____ intention is when the wound edges are brought together (e.g. suturing a surgical incision)

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Cutaneous healing by _____ intention is when the wound edges are brought together (e.g. suturing a surgical incision)

primary

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