Week 1 Wound Healing Part 2 Flashcards
what is primary wound closure. and what is it also called
primary intention: this is when the wound edges approximate without or with little formation of granulation tissue. PTs don’t usually see, this is like healing wounds with sutures or surgery
what is secondary wound closure, and what is it also called
snedondary intention and this is when wound edges are unable to approximate. so granulation tissues fills the wound bed, and turns into scar tissue
what are 3 positive things about moist wound healing
- enhances healing and promotes new growth
- low moisture can lead to necrosis and eschar formation, and will hurt its changes of closing
- need moisture balance
what are we assessing after a comprehensive exam
the ability of the wound to heal
what is the difference between healable, maintenance, and non-healable
healable: we can address the underlying causes
maintenance: potential to heal but still barriers
non: irreversible causes or illnesses so it is like palliative.
how do we treat healable wounds
address the underlying causes and use the DIME method on local wound care
how do we treat maintenance and non-healable wounds
you use conservative approaches, and limit debridement, use antiseptics and reduce moisture, all to try and prevent sepsis.
what does DIME stand for
- debridement (of what kinds of tissues are present)
- inflammation and infection (what stage of healing are we in, and is there s/s infection that are not expected for this phase)
- moisture balance (type and quality too much = maceration, dressing schedule, and are we using dressing that absorbs)
- edge effect