Wound Healing Flashcards
What are examples (classes) of wounds?
- Puncture
- Bruise
- Contusion (blunt trauma)
- Abrasion
- Incision (inflicted w/ sharp object)
- Laceration (inflicted by less sharp object eg. broken glass)
- Ulcer (break in epithelial continuity)
- Avulsion
- Degloving
- Amputation (total, near total) + subluxation
The would healing cascade involved various cellular and molecular components acting in synchrony. Wounds close by formation of new tissue or scar.
What are the 4 phases of wound healing?
- Haemostasis
- Inflammation
- Proliferation
- Remodelling
What happens in phase 1 of wound healing?
- Haemostasis
- Immediate process → clot forms to limit blood loss
- Mediators result in vasoconstriction
- Mins to hours
- The close proximity of the wound edges allows for ease of clot formation and prevents infection by forming a scab
What happens in phase 2 of wound healing?
- Inflammation
- Immediate to 2-5 days
- Sx → redness, swelling, pain, loss of fxn
- Inflammation opens the blood supply (from being constricted previously) and cleanses the wound
- Neutrophils engulf and destroy bacteria
What is phase 3 of wound healing?
- Proliferation / Regeneration
- 5 days to 4 weeks following injury
- Fibroblasts proliferate, driven by cytokines
- Granulation: new collagen tissue laid down, new capillaries fill defect (angiogenesis)
- Contraction: wound edges pull together
- Epithelialisation: cells cross over the moist surface and travel about 3cm from point of origin
What is phase 4 of wound healing?
- Remodelling
- Weeks to months/years from onset of injury
- Longest phase of healing process
- Type III collagen replaced by type I → increases tensile strength to wounds
- Scar tissue is only 80% as strong as original tissue
- Devascularisation of region occurs and fibroblasts undergo apoptosis
There are several factors that affect the success of any wound healing. They can be divided into local factors and systemic factors.
What local factors affect wound healing?
- Type, size and location of wound
- Local blood supply
- De-innervation
- Infection
- Foreign material or contamination
- Trauma
- Radiation damage
Which systemic factors affect wound healing?
- Increasing age
- Co-morbidities (CV disease, DM)
- Nutritional deficiencies (Vit C)
- Medications
- Smoking
- Obesity
What is the reconstructive ladder?
- Various ways to get wounds to heal from simple to more complicated
- Use the easiest option(s) where possible
- Can be in any order
- “Reconstructive toolbox”
Which drugs impair wound healing?
- NSAIDs
- Steroids
- Immunosupressive agents
- Anti neoplastic drugs
What is healing primary intention?
- When wound edges are well opposed
- Clean, narrow wound
- Results in minimal scarring
- Healing by closing (sutures)
What is healing by secondary intention?
- Wound edges poorly opposed (eg. pressure ulcer)
- Broader-based wound
- Results in wider, more visible scar
- Healing occurs from bottom of wound upwards
- Myofibroblasts are vital cells in secondary intention - contract wound and despoit collagen for scar healing
What are the differences between primary intention and secondary closure?
Surgical site infections (SSI) occur when any infection gains entry to the body via a surgical environment. They represent around 15% of all healthcare-associated infections. Wound contamination increases the risk of infection.
What are the four classes of wound contamination?
What is meant by surgical wound healing?
- Any wound made by scalpel will heal by primary intention
- Surgeons aid healing by ensuring adequate opposition of wound edges, through use of surgical glue, sutures or staples
- Ensuring correct tensions of sutures is essential:
- too loose → wound edges will be poorly opposed, limiting the primary intention healing and reducing wound strength
- too tight → blood supply to region may become compromised + lead to tissue necrosis and wound breakdown