Skin integrity and wound care Flashcards
What are the primary functions of the skin?
Protection Temperature regulation Psychosocial Sensation Vitamin D production Immunological Absorption Elimination
What are some factors that affect skin integrity?
things that must be maintained
If the skin and mucous membranes are unbroken and undamaged they provide a barrier
Adequately nourished and hydrated cells resist injury and disease easier
Adequate circulation must be maintained for cells to live and remove wastes
What are some factors that place a person at risk for skin alterations and why?
Lifestyle variables like promiscuity, homosexuality, IV drug usage, hemophiliacs, Occupation that gives sun exposure, piercings - (most of these would allow microorganisms entry though puncture or mucous membrane damage)
Changes in health state
dehydration or malnutrition
reduced sensation
(skin will become prone to breakdown, lack of senses could cause damage the pt doesnt know about,)
Illness - diabetes
(lack of circulation could cause ulcers or cuts to become necrotic)
Infections (impedes healing)
Diagnostic measures
GI tests could cause diarrhea ( this can cause maceration because of prolonged exposure to moisture)
Therapeutic measures
Bedrests (immobility)
Casts (masceration and irritation)
Aquathermia unit (masceration)
Radiation therapy (damages normal cells as well as cancerous cells, could destroy skin integrity)
Medications (diarrhea, itching, rashes, ect)
What are some developmental considerations for skin integrity?
Infant skin and mucous membranes are easily damaged and subject to infection
Skin is weaker in children under 2 than it is in adults
as children get older their skin becomes increasingly resistant in injury and infection
When people get older the structure of skin changes. It loses circulation, elasticity, and thickness,
What are some specific skin alterations that occur when aging?
The subcutaneous and dermal layers become thin making them easier to damage, harder to insulate, wrinkle, and pressure and pain is reduced
Sebacious and sweat glands decrease in activity causing the skin to become drier causing pruritis
Cell renewal is shorter, healing time delayed
Melanocytes are fewer in number, causing grey-white hair and uneven pigment
Collagen fiber is less organized , losing elasticity
What conditions of health could cause a person to be more at risk for skin integrity damage?
Very thin or very obese people
Fluid loss through fever, vomiting, or diarrhea (dehydration)
Excessive perspiration in skin folds (masceration, possible infections)
Jaundice (pruritus can cause open lesions)
Diseases of the skin like psoriasis and eczema
Someone that takes Medications (diarrhea, itching, rashes, ect)
How are wounds classified?
Intentional/ unintentional (surgical/accidents)
Open and closed (skin surface broken/unbroken)
Acute and chronic (approximated and short healing time/ unapproximated, long healing time)
Partial thickness, full thickness, complex
What is the difference between intentional and unintentional wounds?
intentional
approximated edges, therapeutic in nature, bleeding controlled, low risk of infection, healing is facilitated
Unintentional
accidental, nonapproximated edges, contamination is likely, edges are jagged not clean, bleeding uncontrolled, high risk of infection
What is open vs closed wounds
open
skin surface is broken ex (incisions and abrasions)
Closed
skin surface not broken but soft tissue is damaged, internal hemorrhaging and injury may have occured.
Acute vs chronic wounds
What types of wounds would you expect to see in these categories?
acute
heal within days or weeks, edges are approximated, infection risk is low, go through normal healing process
surgical or therapudic wounds
Chronic
do not go through normal healing process, edges are not approximated, infection risk is high, healing time is delayed, they remain in the inflammatory phase of healing,
any wound that does not heal along the expected continuum, like pressure ulcers, arterial or venous insufficiency
How is tissue repaired?
by physiologic mechanisms that regenerate functioning and replace connective tissue cells with scar tissue
They increase blood supply to damaged area, wall off and remove cellular and foreign debris, and initiate cellular development
What is primary, secondary, and tertiary intention?
Primary - well approximated wound, intentional,
Secondary - when a large wound is left open to heal, heals slowly causing more scar tissue, edges are not well approximated, often contaminated,
Tertiary - wounds that are left open for a couple days to drain exudate or allow edema and infection to drain, and are then closed
what can you do to promote healing? (principals)
keep a wound clean and free of debris, positioning for circulation,
Surgical asepsis when caring for the wound
What are the phases of wound healing?
hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and maturation
What is hemostasis?
bleeding stops and, exudate is produced in this phase creating heat, redness and pain
What is the inflammatory response ?
lasts about 4-6 days
Leukocytes and macrophages arrive to ingest bacteria, and debris.
Macrophages release growth factors 24 hours after cycle starts to help new epithelial cells and blood vessels grow
Acute inflammation here (redness, swelling, heat, pain)
Systemic considerations are elevated temp, leukocytosis, and malaise
What is the proliferation phase?
What are some considerations in this phase?
lasts for several weeks
new tissue is made to fill wound space, especially granulation tissue (foundation for scar tissue development)
Wound will be lighter in color by end of second week
skin forms over granulation tissue
nutrition, oxygenation, preventative strain
What is the maturation phase?
final stage begins about 3 weeks after injury
deposited collagen is remodeled and forms a scar
What are some local negative factors that affect wound healing?
pressure (no circulation )
Desiccation ( cells that dehydrate and die)
Maceration (overhydration related to urinary and fecal incontinence)
Trauma
Edema (interferes with blood supply to site, causes inadequate oxygen and nutrition)
Infection ( increases stress on the body, leaves no reserves of energy to heal the wound , toxins are also produced when bacteria die)
Necrosis ( dead tissue, healing cannot take place with dead tissue in wound)
What are the systemic factors that affect wound healing?
Age
circulation and oxygenation ( must have enough of both to deliver oxygen and nutrients and remove wastes and debris)
Nutritional status (we require adequate amounts of macro and micronutrients to heal, as well as fluids)
wound condition (including sutures)
Meds and health status ( People taking corticosteriods, radiation therapy, chemotherapy, chronic illnesses, and prolonged antibiotic therapy are at risk)
Immunsupression - from disease, meds, and age
When would the symptoms of infection become noticeable and what would you see?
2 - 7 days
purulent drainage, increased drainage, pain, redness, swelling, increased body temp, leukocytosis,
What can cause a hemorrhage?
Symptoms?
How often should you check?
Slipped suture, dislodged clot at wound site, infection, erosion of a blood vessel by a foreign body like a drain
hematoma
frequently during the first 48 hours then every 8 after that