Wound Healing: Clinical Wound Management (via jillianmaul8)

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Last updated 1:59 AM on 5/2/26
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120 Terms

1
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Wound not progressing thru the Normal healing pathway

Chronic wound

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Factors that contribute to chronic wounds (3)

-intrinsic

-extrinsic

-iatrogenic

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Poor wound care, poor surgical technique, IV infiltrate, trauma, and local ischemia are all ___ factors contributing to chronic wounds

iatrogenic

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Partial thickness goes through these two tissue layers

Epidermis + dermis

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Full thickness goes through these three tissue layers

Epidermis + dermis + sub-Q

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Partial thickness wound heals by ____ ONLY; no other phases of healing occur

Re-epithelialization

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___ thickness wound heals through full wound healing process; includes inflammation, proliferation, re-epithelialization, and remodeling

Full

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High ___ might indicate infection or inflammation

WBC

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low ___ may indicate immunosuppression, chemotherapy, steroids, surgery, radiation, malnutrition

WBC

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Normal WBC

4500 - 11000

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This lab value determines risk of bleeding

INR

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___ INR is normal, ok for sharp debridement

1.0

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This level of INR is increased; selective or sharp deride with caution

1-2

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This level of INR means they need anticoagulation therapy; consider automatic enzymatic debridement

2-3

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This level of INR indicates risk of excessive bleeding

> 3

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Blood glucose optimal control is < __ mg/dL

<150

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Active infection will (incr/decr) blood glucose

INCREASE

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Normal Hyperglycemia // NO WOUND HEALING if over this amount

> 180 mg/dL // >200

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A1C values

Normal: <5.7%

Pre-diabetes: 5.7-6.4%

Diabetes: 6.5% +

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These two lab values are nutrition related

Albumin and pre-albumin

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___ pre-albumin is needed for healing

> 20 mg/dL

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During dermatology screening, we should determine baseline ___

SKIN TONE

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Change in skin tone that warrants further inspection

Erythema

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Due to aging, hyperpigmentation (incr/decr) over time

INCREASES

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Pitting edema barely detectable impression when finger pressed into skin

+1

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Pitting edema slight indentation; 15 s to rebound

+2

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Pitting edema deeper indentation; 30 s to rebound

+3

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Pitting edema that takes >30s to rebound

4+

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Grading scale for pulse exam (BILATERAL CHECK)

0 = absent pulse

1 = diminished pulse

2 = normal

3 = pathologically prominent pulse

30
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Non-invasive vascular testing (3)

-ABI

-rubor of dependency and venous filling time

-capillary refill

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Non-viable tissue; byproduct of the immune system "wound debridement" (autolysis)

Slough

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Granulation tissue is formed via what process?

Neoangiogenesis

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Non-viable tissue; no breakdown by immune system; usually black and indicates no blood flow; "gangrene"

Eschar

34
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T/F: we should do debridement on eschar on heel

FALSE!!!! Unless it is infected, we dont want calcaneous to get exposed

35
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(Viable/nonviable) adipose tissue is golden, brown-yellow, dull

NON-VIABLE

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(Viable/nonviable) adipose tissue is yellow, globular, shiny, and moist

VIABLE

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Excess moisture on the skin

Maceration

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Not enough blood flow; area is cooler and can turn blue/purple

Cyanosis

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Bruising

ecchymosis

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Occurs when fibrotic changes happen around the wound from chronic inflammation; wound is very FIRM compared to other parts of body; occasional temperature change

Induration

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Fluid coming out of wound; normal process

Exudate

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Exudate volume is (higher/lower) in inflammatory phase

HIGHER

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This type of drainage is blood

Sanguineous

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This type of drainage is typical; contains serum combined with RBC; clear pink-ish fluid

Serosanguinious

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Clear yellow drainage from wound

Serous

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Thick, opaque, potentially odorous and infectious drainage from wound

Purulent

47
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T/F: odor always indicates inflection

FALSE!!! It's often due to dressing

48
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This outcome measure includes 13 items related to the wound bed, periwound, and drainage

Bates-Jensen wound assessment tool (BWAT)

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This outcome measure is a risk stratification tool for all wounds, regardless of tx

wound healing index (WHI)

50
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This outcome measure is adapted from the BWAT and includes telemedicine and electronic consultation

Photographic wound assessment tool (PWAT)

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This outcome measure is for all wound types; 45 items that encompasses 3 domains: physical sx/everyday life, social life, well-being

Cardiff wound impact schedule

52
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Review POC paradigm chart

53
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Second ppt starting here

54
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Is tap water safe to cleanse the wound?

YES — but NO WELL WATER

55
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T/F: sterile saline can be used even if has been opened for 24 hours

FALSE!

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This is a wound cleanser that is non-cytotoxic, has a pH neutral to skin, is a broad-spectrum antimicrobial, and can penetrate & disrupt biofilm; anti-inflammatory & reduces pain/itching

Hypochlorous acid (HOCl)

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T/F: cytotoxic agents such as hydrogen peroxide, hypochlorite, and betadine are recommended wound cleansers

FALSE!!! AVOID CYTOTOXIC AGENTS

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For a wound that is grossly infected, has thick exudate, necrotic tissue and slough, what method would we use to cleanse the wound?

Pulsed lavage w/suction

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T/F: pulsed lavage with suction is indicated in a wound that has long tunneling and undermining

FALSE!! CONTRAINDICATION

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what is a precaution for pulsed lavage?

INFECTION RISK — SPRAYS ALL OVER THE ROOM (WEAR PPE!!!!)

61
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To unbridle or remove a restraint; this method improves assessment of wound, decreases infection risk, removes physical barriers, and activates healing pathways

Debridement

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What to consider before debridement....

-blood flow

-patient tolerance (pain)

-PT tolerance and safety (takes a long time)

-what is under that tissue (+ emergency planning if you hit important structure)

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How much do you debride?

Everything that is necrotic; can do multiple days in a row

64
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This type of debridement is "nature's process"; selective but slow; follows moist wound healing properties

Autolytic debridement

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T/F: with autolytic debridement, we want the wound to be as dry as possible to avoid infection

FALSE!!!! WE WANT MOIST SO CELLS ARE ALIVE

66
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___ debridement is least costly

AUTOLYTIC (hydrogel)

67
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This type of debridement involves applying topical enzymes to break down necrotic tissue; selective; faster and more expensive than autolytic

Enzymatic debridement

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How often is enzymatic debridement performed?

DAILY

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If patient has non-infected semi-large wounds with extensive necrotic tissue and is unable to tolerate selective debridement or has limited access to debridement services, we would use this method

Enzymatic debridement

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autolytic and enzymatic debridement are contraindicated if...

THE WOUND IS INFECTED

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Enzymatic debridement can NOT be used with __ or __ dressings

Silver or iodine

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Autolytic and enzymatic debridement precautions include ___ maceration

Periwound

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T/F: autolytic and enzymatic debridement are extremely effective in immunocompromised population and patients with poor perfusion

FALSE!!!! NO BLOOD FLOW, NO IMMUNE RESPONSE

74
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This category of debridement is faster than autolytic and enzymatic debridement but is non-selective (pulls off some healthy tissue)

Mechanical debridement

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Monofilament pads, whirlpool, contract ultrasound, wet-to-dry dressings (DONT DO), and pulsed lavage are all forms of ___ debridement

Mechanical

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"Virtually painful" method of mechanical debridement; fibers trap bacteria and pull of necrotic tissue; excellent for the non-wound care clinician

Monofilament pads

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T/F: Whirlpool is no longer standard of care due to extremely high infection risk, uncontrolled pressures, and dry skin

TRUE — alternative: shower

78
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Use of sharp instrument to remove ONLY necrotic and non-viable tissue; selective & rapid but may be painful

Selective debridement

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When doing selective debridement, we need to consider patient ___ ability

CLOTTING (determine INR — caution with liver failure pts)

80
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When to stop selective debridement? (3)

-when all non-viable tissue exposed

-exposed a new structure (bone, tendon, nerves, organs)

-fatigue

81
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For INR > ___ do NOT do selective debridement because patient is an uncontrolled bleeding risk

3.0

82
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This type of debridement is known as larval therapy or maggot therapy; relatively rapid (3-5 days) and painless

Biologic debridement

83
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What is the gold standard to determine infection/bioburden (bacteria in a wound)?

Tissue biopsy

84
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This type of infection is also known as "critical colonization"; bacteria is kind of winning over WBCs, enough to irritate wound

Superficial

85
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NERDS: clinical signs of critical colonization (superficial infection)

Nonhealing wound

Exudative wound

Red and bleeding granulation

Debris on wound surface

Smell/unpleasent odor

86
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Management for a superficial infection?

Topical treatment

87
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STONES: clinical signs of a deep infection

Size is bigger

Temperature increased

Oprobe to or exposed bone

New or satellite areas of breakdown

Exudate, erythema, edema

Smell

88
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Do superficial infections need antibiotics?

NO, just topical tx

89
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Management for deep infections?

Systemic tx or surgical intervention

90
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T/F: topical dressing can fix a deep infection

FALSE!!!! Use topicals to control it, but will need systemic tx

91
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This material has antimicrobial properties; products release it over 3-7 days (dont need new one everyday); concern for bacterial resistance

Silver

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If you haven't cleared an infection using topical treatment in __ days, try systemic

14 days

93
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This material has antimicrobial properties and is effective against biofilms; non-cytotoxic to human cells; do NOT combine with collagenase

Cadexomer iodine

94
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This material has antimicrobial properties and is used in autolytic debridement due to high sugar content; stimulates stalled wounds and is available in multiple dressing cateogries

Manuka honey

95
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Type of bacterial biofilm that is individual, free-floating; "typical" bacteria that causes ACUTE infection by triggering inflammatory response from immune system; metabolically active so antibiotics work on this

Planktonic bacteria

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(Planktonic bacteria/biofilm) are able to be cultured in healthcare labs

Planktonic bacteria

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This is a community of bacteria encased in extra polymeric substance (EPS); low antibiotic response since they are not metabolically active; induced chromic inflammatory response; an example is dental plaque

Biofilm

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Biofilm can form in ___ hours; it is NOT VISIBLE, detectable, OR curable at bedside

6-12 hours

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Biofilm (does/does not) respond to antibiotics

DOES NOT!!!!!

100
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Can biofilm be rinsed or wiped away?

NO!!!!!! Must be physical removed by scraping