Wounds Flashcards
1
Q
Skin
A
- Largest organ
- Acidic to maintain our normal skin flora
- ⅓ Blood Volume
- Function: Protection, Thermoregulation, Sensation/Communication, Elimination
2
Q
What are the skin layers?
A
- Epidermis
- Dermis
- Subcutaneous
3
Q
Epidermis
A
A thin, Avascular layer regenerates itself every 4-6 weeks
4
Q
Dermis
A
- Provides tensile strength, moisture retention, blood and oxygen to the skin
- Protect underlying muscles, bones and organs
- Promote an ongoing blood supply to the dermis for regeneration
- It provides a cushion between skin layers, muscle and bones
5
Q
Subcutaneous
A
- A layer of fat and connective tissue that houses larger blood vessels and nerves
- Regulation of temperature of the skin itself and the body
6
Q
Younger Skin
A
- Flatten between epidermis and dermis by 50%
- Decrease in the number of sweat gland and dermal protein and blood vessels
- Decreased elastin fibers so easily stretched
7
Q
Older Skin
A
- Skin becomes less effective barrier
- Decreased pain perception
- Diminished immune
8
Q
Acute Wounds
A
- Less than 6 weeks duration that progress through the phases of healing without delay
- Without complications
- Follow the normal healing process in an orderly timely way
- Limited interventions required
- Return to function
9
Q
Chronic Wounds
A
- Wounds which deviate from the expected sequence of repair in terms of time, appearance and response to appropriate treatment
- A wound that has not demonstrated significant signs of healing in 6 weeks can be classified as chronic
- Prolonged inflammation complication may occur
- Return to normal function much slower, delayed
- May not heal completely or may re-occur
10
Q
4 main stages of wound healing:
A
- Heamostasis
- Inflammation
- Proliferation or reconstruction
- Maturation or remodelling of scar tissue
11
Q
Wound Healing: Heamostasis (1)
A
Immediate: Redness, pain, swelling. Vasoconstriction occurs, blood clot form
12
Q
Wound Healing: Inflammation (2)
A
- 0-10 days: Vasodilation/Capillary permeability increases, bringing Neutrophils and macrophages to the wound
- Phagocytosis of microbes and debris
- Macrophages stimulate the formation of granulation tissue and production of fibroblasts
13
Q
Wound Healing: Proliferation or reconstruction (3)
A
- 2-24 days: fibroblasts produce collagen
- New cells and capillary buds form in wound bed
- Fragile granulation tissue forms
- Contraction begins
- Epithelial cells migrate across granulated wound bed wound is sealed and tensile strength increases
14
Q
Wound Healing: Maturation or remodelling of scar tissue (4)
A
- 24 days up to 1 year
- Collagen fibres reorganise/realign and tighten, scar tissue reduces
- Tensile strength increases
- Vessels restored to normal
15
Q
Healing by Primary Intervention
A
- Edges close together or wound edges brought together by sutures loss of structural tissue
- Healing occurs faster
- Less chance of infection
- Minimal tissue destruction
- Granulation tissue not visible
- Minimal scar
16
Q
Healing by Secondary Intervention
A
- Wound not closed or unable to be closed (pressure injury, burns, Infection, excessive trauma, wound breakdown)
- Significant loss of structural tissue
- Healing occurs slower
- Greater chance of infection
- Cavity fills with granulation tissue- later forms connective tissue- scar
17
Q
What promotes healing?
A
Nutrition Hydration Oxygen Wound protection Warmth Moisture Circulation Cleanliness
18
Q
Complications for healing
A
- Poor nutrition
- Co- morbidities
- Medication (any medications that could compromise skin thickness etc)
- Age (older you are, harder to heal)
- Smoking (takes longer to heal as 1 cigarette = vasoconstriction for 6 hours)
- Patients; some patients may be noncompliant with wound care, or may be depressed as a result of scarring
- Location (e.g. over a joint)
19
Q
Wound Closures
A
- Wound glue
- Staples- see them on major abdominal surgery, joint repair and heads
- Sutures
20
Q
Cleaning a Suture Line
A
- Spread bacteria away from the centre of the wound. Spread to the side.
- Clean from the centre out
- Get a new cleaning tool after each swipe; don’t reuse
21
Q
Wound Assessment
A
What type of wound is this?
- How do I expect this wound to heal?
- What risks factors for healing are evident?
Wound healing?
- Is the wound healing?
- Is the wound improving or getting worse?
- Is there any complication occurring?
- How can I promote effective healing with this patient? And how can I involve the patient in their care?
Wound care
- How could wound contamination occur
- How will I prevent wound contamination from occurring/
- What can I touch?
- What can I not touch? What standard precautions are needed? Do I need to wear sterile gloves? How confident am I to provide this care? What assistance do I need?
22
Q
Steps in wound washing/dressing
A
- With clean hands clean trolley
- Gather dressing pack, place on bottom shelf
- Hand hygiene
- Open pack, place drape on top shelf, position waste bag
- Assemble equipment on top shelf
- Apply non sterile gloves
- Position drape under wound
- Remove dressing, expose wound and dispose of dressing into waste bag
- Hand hygiene
- Apply sterile gloves
- Clean wound
- Dress wound
- Dispose of equipment
- Clean trolley
- Hand hygiene