Wound Dressings Flashcards
Transparent films Indications
Stage 1+2 pressure ulcers
Secondary dressing in some situations
Good for autolytic debridement
Skin donor sites
Cover for hydrophilic powder and paste preparations and hydrogels
Transparent film adv and disadvantage
ADV
- Can keep an eye on wound because see through
- Impermeable to external fluids and bacteria so keeping wound safe
- Minimal friction
- Promotes autolytic debridement
- comfy
DISADV
- NON ABSORPTIVE so DO NOT USE on heavy exudate wounds
- application can be hard
- Don’t use if surrounding wound area is fragile
Hydrocolloids indications
Protection of partial thickness wounds
Autolytic debridement of necrosis or slough
Wounds with MILD exudate — they have min/mod absorbency
NOT recommended for heavy exudate wounds, infection, or periwound maceration
Hydrogel indications
Partial and full thickness wounds
Wound with necrotic or slough tissue
Burns and tissue damage by radiation
Good for diabetic wounds
NOT FOR HEAVY EXUDATE OR INFECTION
Foam dressing indications
Partial and full thickness wounds with min to mod exudate
Secondary dressing for wounds with packing to provide extra absorption
Protect and insulate wounds
Manages min-heavy exudate
DO NOT USE ON DRY WOUNDS OR WOUNDS WITH NO EXUDATE, ESCHAR, OR INFECTION
Alginates and hydro fibers
Mod-large amounts of exudate — go to for lots of drainage
Wounds with combo exudate and necrosis
Wounds that require packing
Infected and non infected exudating wounds
DO NOT USE ON DRY ESCHAR
GAUZE
Exudate wounds
Dead space, tunneling, sinus tracts
Combo exudate or necrotic tissue
GO TO for infection
Protects clean wounds
— Can sometimes be pain on removal, labor intensive, requires secondary dressing, and you want to avoid direct contact with granulations tissue