Wounds Flashcards

1
Q

What are the phases of wound healing? Name their time frames

A

(0. Hemostasis)
1. Inflammation - 0-5 days
2. Proliferation - 4 days to 2-3 weeks
3. Maturation/Remodeling 20 days after injury - up to years

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2
Q

Explain what happens during the Inflammation phase of wound healing

A
  • initially vasoconstriction and platelet plug formation followed by fibrin clot formation (some separate this as hemostasis phase)
  • first: neutrophils reach tissue within 6 hours after injury - release enzymes and phagocytize to remove extracellular debris
  • 12 hours after injury - monocytes - become macrophages within 24-48 hours - remove necrotic tissue, bacteria, foreign material
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3
Q

Explain what happens during the proliferative phase of wound healing

A
  • angiogenesis (VEGF, PAF)
  • granulation tissue formation - fibroblasts synthesizing collagen and formation granulation tissue
  • epithelialization - new epithelium first visible 4-5 days after injury
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4
Q

What is the earliest wound contraction is first noticeable

A

5 to 9 days after injury

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5
Q

Describe the maturation phase of wound healing

A

Also called remodelling phase
starts 17-20 days after injury
* myofibroblasts has contractile elemants and lead to wound contraction
* remodelling of collagen fiber bundles

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6
Q

How strong is a scar compared to original tissue?

A

80%

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7
Q

What are the classifications of wounds based on their contamination?

A
  1. clean - surgical, atraumatic aseptic
  2. clean contaminated - surgical with minor break in asepsis
  3. contaminated - recent wound related to trauma, can be surgical with major breaks in asepsis
  4. infected or dirty - older wound with obvious signs of infection
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8
Q

How would you classify the contamination of a surgery entering the GI tract?

A

clean contaminated

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9
Q

how many bacterial organisms per gram does an infected wound contain?

A

10^5 organism/gram tissue

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10
Q

What are the grades of open fractures?

A

Grade 1: small break in skin (<1 cm), bone penetrating from the inside out

Grade 2: soft tissue trauma > 1 cm, usually trauma from outside in and wound is continuous with the bone fracture (e.g., bite wound)

Grade 3: extensive soft tissue injury, commonly high degree comminuted trauma

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11
Q

Whe addressing an open fracture, should you push the fractured bone back in place before bandaging?

A

no, pushing it back in will likely move contamination deeper into the tisse

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12
Q

At what pressure and for how long do you apply a pneumatic blood pressure cuff as tourniquet?

A

200 mm Hg for up to 1 hour

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13
Q

During what phase of wound healing is a wet-to-dry bandage most appropriate?

A

debridement phase (part of the inflammatory phase)

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14
Q

What is the timing for delayed primary wound closure?

A

2-5 days after injury

delayed secondary closure if after 5 days

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15
Q

List the parts needed for negative pressure wound therapy

A
  • contact layer (e.g., polyurethane foam or gauze sponges)
  • suction tubing
  • adhesive occlusive film
  • suction device - usually set at - 125 mm Hg
  • collection cannister
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16
Q

What are the potential benefits of negative pressure wound therapy?

A
  • improved neovascularization
  • improved granulation tissue formation
  • reduction in wound size
17
Q

List contraindications for negative pressure wound therapy

A
  • bleeding wound or coagulopathies/receiving anticoagulants
  • necrotic tissue with eschar
  • untreated osteomyelitis
  • malignancies
  • exposed nerves, vessels, anastomosis or organs
18
Q

How is HBOT suspected to improve angiogenesis?

A

creates an oxygen gradient favoring vascularization

19
Q

How well does triple antibiotic help for Pseudomonas infections?

A

not well, poor acitvity against it

20
Q

What properties of honey make it antimicrobial?

A
  • hydrogen peroxide content
  • osmolarity
  • acidity
21
Q

How does cats wound healing differ from dogs?

A

sutured wounds are only half as strong compared to dogs 7 days later

demonstrate significantly less granulation tissue in wounds healing by second intention