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Wound not progressing thru the Normal healing pathway
Chronic wound
Factors that contribute to chronic wounds (3)
-intrinsic
-extrinsic
-iatrogenic
Poor wound care, poor surgical technique, IV infiltrate, trauma, and local ischemia are all ___ factors contributing to chronic wounds
iatrogenic
Partial thickness goes through these two tissue layers
Epidermis + dermis
Full thickness goes through these three tissue layers
Epidermis + dermis + sub-Q
Partial thickness wound heals by ____ ONLY; no other phases of healing occur
Re-epithelialization
___ thickness wound heals through full wound healing process; includes inflammation, proliferation, re-epithelialization, and remodeling
Full
High ___ might indicate infection or inflammation
WBC
low ___ may indicate immunosuppression, chemotherapy, steroids, surgery, radiation, malnutrition
WBC
Normal WBC
4500 - 11000
This lab value determines risk of bleeding
INR
___ INR is normal, ok for sharp debridement
1.0
This level of INR is increased; selective or sharp deride with caution
1-2
This level of INR means they need anticoagulation therapy; consider automatic enzymatic debridement
2-3
This level of INR indicates risk of excessive bleeding
> 3
Blood glucose optimal control is < __ mg/dL
<150
Active infection will (incr/decr) blood glucose
INCREASE
Normal Hyperglycemia // NO WOUND HEALING if over this amount
> 180 mg/dL // >200
A1C values
Normal: <5.7%
Pre-diabetes: 5.7-6.4%
Diabetes: 6.5% +
These two lab values are nutrition related
Albumin and pre-albumin
___ pre-albumin is needed for healing
> 20 mg/dL
During dermatology screening, we should determine baseline ___
SKIN TONE
Change in skin tone that warrants further inspection
Erythema
Due to aging, hyperpigmentation (incr/decr) over time
INCREASES
Pitting edema barely detectable impression when finger pressed into skin
+1
Pitting edema slight indentation; 15 s to rebound
+2
Pitting edema deeper indentation; 30 s to rebound
+3
Pitting edema that takes >30s to rebound
4+
Grading scale for pulse exam (BILATERAL CHECK)
0 = absent pulse
1 = diminished pulse
2 = normal
3 = pathologically prominent pulse
Non-invasive vascular testing (3)
-ABI
-rubor of dependency and venous filling time
-capillary refill
Non-viable tissue; byproduct of the immune system "wound debridement" (autolysis)
Slough
Granulation tissue is formed via what process?
Neoangiogenesis
Non-viable tissue; no breakdown by immune system; usually black and indicates no blood flow; "gangrene"
Eschar
T/F: we should do debridement on eschar on heel
FALSE!!!! Unless it is infected, we dont want calcaneous to get exposed
(Viable/nonviable) adipose tissue is golden, brown-yellow, dull
NON-VIABLE
(Viable/nonviable) adipose tissue is yellow, globular, shiny, and moist
VIABLE
Excess moisture on the skin
Maceration
Not enough blood flow; area is cooler and can turn blue/purple
Cyanosis
Bruising
ecchymosis
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
Fluid coming out of wound; normal process
Exudate
Exudate volume is (higher/lower) in inflammatory phase
HIGHER
This type of drainage is blood
Sanguineous
This type of drainage is typical; contains serum combined with RBC; clear pink-ish fluid
Serosanguinious
Clear yellow drainage from wound
Serous
Thick, opaque, potentially odorous and infectious drainage from wound
Purulent
T/F: odor always indicates inflection
FALSE!!! It's often due to dressing
This outcome measure includes 13 items related to the wound bed, periwound, and drainage
Bates-Jensen wound assessment tool (BWAT)
This outcome measure is a risk stratification tool for all wounds, regardless of tx
wound healing index (WHI)
This outcome measure is adapted from the BWAT and includes telemedicine and electronic consultation
Photographic wound assessment tool (PWAT)
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
Review POC paradigm chart
Second ppt starting here
Is tap water safe to cleanse the wound?
YES — but NO WELL WATER
T/F: sterile saline can be used even if has been opened for 24 hours
FALSE!
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)
T/F: cytotoxic agents such as hydrogen peroxide, hypochlorite, and betadine are recommended wound cleansers
FALSE!!! AVOID CYTOTOXIC AGENTS
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
T/F: pulsed lavage with suction is indicated in a wound that has long tunneling and undermining
FALSE!! CONTRAINDICATION
what is a precaution for pulsed lavage?
INFECTION RISK — SPRAYS ALL OVER THE ROOM (WEAR PPE!!!!)
To unbridle or remove a restraint; this method improves assessment of wound, decreases infection risk, removes physical barriers, and activates healing pathways
Debridement
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)
How much do you debride?
Everything that is necrotic; can do multiple days in a row
This type of debridement is "nature's process"; selective but slow; follows moist wound healing properties
Autolytic debridement
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
___ debridement is least costly
AUTOLYTIC (hydrogel)
This type of debridement involves applying topical enzymes to break down necrotic tissue; selective; faster and more expensive than autolytic
Enzymatic debridement
How often is enzymatic debridement performed?
DAILY
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
autolytic and enzymatic debridement are contraindicated if...
THE WOUND IS INFECTED
Enzymatic debridement can NOT be used with __ or __ dressings
Silver or iodine
Autolytic and enzymatic debridement precautions include ___ maceration
Periwound
T/F: autolytic and enzymatic debridement are extremely effective in immunocompromised population and patients with poor perfusion
FALSE!!!! NO BLOOD FLOW, NO IMMUNE RESPONSE
This category of debridement is faster than autolytic and enzymatic debridement but is non-selective (pulls off some healthy tissue)
Mechanical debridement
Monofilament pads, whirlpool, contract ultrasound, wet-to-dry dressings (DONT DO), and pulsed lavage are all forms of ___ debridement
Mechanical
"Virtually painful" method of mechanical debridement; fibers trap bacteria and pull of necrotic tissue; excellent for the non-wound care clinician
Monofilament pads
T/F: Whirlpool is no longer standard of care due to extremely high infection risk, uncontrolled pressures, and dry skin
TRUE — alternative: shower
Use of sharp instrument to remove ONLY necrotic and non-viable tissue; selective & rapid but may be painful
Selective debridement
When doing selective debridement, we need to consider patient ___ ability
CLOTTING (determine INR — caution with liver failure pts)
When to stop selective debridement? (3)
-when all non-viable tissue exposed
-exposed a new structure (bone, tendon, nerves, organs)
-fatigue
For INR > ___ do NOT do selective debridement because patient is an uncontrolled bleeding risk
3.0
This type of debridement is known as larval therapy or maggot therapy; relatively rapid (3-5 days) and painless
Biologic debridement
What is the gold standard to determine infection/bioburden (bacteria in a wound)?
Tissue biopsy
This type of infection is also known as "critical colonization"; bacteria is kind of winning over WBCs, enough to irritate wound
Superficial
NERDS: clinical signs of critical colonization (superficial infection)
Nonhealing wound
Exudative wound
Red and bleeding granulation
Debris on wound surface
Smell/unpleasent odor
Management for a superficial infection?
Topical treatment
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
Do superficial infections need antibiotics?
NO, just topical tx
Management for deep infections?
Systemic tx or surgical intervention
T/F: topical dressing can fix a deep infection
FALSE!!!! Use topicals to control it, but will need systemic tx
This material has antimicrobial properties; products release it over 3-7 days (dont need new one everyday); concern for bacterial resistance
Silver
If you haven't cleared an infection using topical treatment in __ days, try systemic
14 days
This material has antimicrobial properties and is effective against biofilms; non-cytotoxic to human cells; do NOT combine with collagenase
Cadexomer iodine
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
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
(Planktonic bacteria/biofilm) are able to be cultured in healthcare labs
Planktonic bacteria
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
Biofilm can form in ___ hours; it is NOT VISIBLE, detectable, OR curable at bedside
6-12 hours
Biofilm (does/does not) respond to antibiotics
DOES NOT!!!!!
Can biofilm be rinsed or wiped away?
NO!!!!!! Must be physical removed by scraping