Wounds and Wound Healing Flashcards
The process of wound closure is classified into what three distinct types based on the timing of replacement of the epithelium over the wound?
Primary
Secondary
Tertiary
Wound healing is also divided by physiologic process into what three stages of phases?
Inflammatory or substrate
Proliferative
Maturation or remodeling
___ is the basic physiologic process that is common to all wounds.
Inflammation
The second and third phases of wound healing are relatively constant, regardless of the type of wound healing. These phases begin only when what has happened?
When the wound is covered by epithelium
Main cells involved in the substrate (inflammatory) phase?
PMNs, platelets, macrophages
The second phase of wound healing is characterized by what?
The production of collagen in the wound, which appears less edematous and inflamed than before, but the wound scar may be raised, red, and hard
Main cell involved in the proliferative phase?
Fibroblast (which produces collagen)
The third phase of wound healing is characterized by what?
Maturation of collagen by intermolecular cross-linking
What is the most common method to close an acute wound?
Primarily close the wound -> healing by primary intention (closure with sutures, staples, adhesive, any technique by which the surgeon intentionally approximates the epidermal edges of the wound)
Advantages and disadvantages of healing by primary intention?
Advantage: easiest for the patient to manage, rapid return of function to the wounded part, final cosmetic result is superior
Disadvantage: risk of wound infection
What is involved in healing by secondary intention?
Leaving the full-thickness wound open; classically wounds are treated with “wet-to-dry” dressings wherein a gauze sponge is moistened with saline and used to pack the wound, covered with a dry dressing. The moist sponge dries out and when it is removed and changed once or twice a day, gentle debridement of the wound is achieved. Granulation tissue will form in the base of the wound.
Epithelial cells cannot migrate across granulation tissue, so healing in secondary intention occurs primarily by ___.
Wound contraction
Advantages and disadvantages of healing by secondary intention?
Adv: wound infection is virtually impossible
Disadv: daily dressing changes are required until the wound is healed, which may take some time, and the final result is a cicatrix that may be unsightly
What is healing by tertiary intention?
Delayed primary closure - wound initially managed as a secondary intention wound; after about 5 days, the wound edges are actively approximated
Grade 1 Pressure Sore Grade?
Non-blanching erythematous area on intact skin