Wound Healing Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different types of wound closures

A

Primary intention, Secondary intention, and Tertiary intention

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2
Q

What is primary intention?

A

Wound edges are approximated and held by mechanical means (e.g. staples, adhesives, sutures, tape)

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3
Q

What is the purpose of primary intention?

A

Serves to minimize new tissue formation within the wound by getting rid of dead space, reduce scar formation and avoid having a depressed scar.

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4
Q

Full thickness wounds and surgical wounds are appropriate for which type of wound closure?

A

Primary Intention

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5
Q

What are the benefits of a primary intention wound closure?

A

Minimal risk of infection, tissue loss, and scarring, enhanced wound closure.

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6
Q

What is secondary intention?

A

The wound is left open and the wound edges come together naturally by means of granulation and contraction.

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7
Q

Wounds edges can be approximated with secondary intention wound closures.
TRUE OR FALSE

A

False. Wound edges cannot be approximated

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8
Q

What type of wounds are used for secondary intention type wound closures?

A

Chronic wounds (pressure injuries, venous ulcers, diabetic ulcers, and surgical incisions with tissue loss)

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9
Q

What are the disadvantages of secondary intention wound closures?

A

Greater amount of tissue loss, higher risk of infection, and decreased tensile strength (80%), increased risk of recurrence, and longer healing times. (Scar tissue is not as strong as original skin.(

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10
Q

Describe secondary intention wound closures.

A

The wound is left open and the wound edges come together naturally by means of GRANULATION and CONTRACTION.

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11
Q

Describe tertiary intention wound closures

A

Typically closed with sutures, staples, or adhesive skin closures. Used on surgical or traumatic wounds left open to heal to remove bacteria and contamination with closure after a delay of days to weeks.

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12
Q

What are the 2 main mechanisms of healing?

A

Regeneration and Scar formation

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13
Q

What is regeneration?

A

It is the replacement of damaged or lost tissue with new tissue. Seen with partial-thickness wounds impacting epidermis and superficial dermis layers only.

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14
Q

What is scar formation?

A

It is a mechanism of healing which is the replacement of damaged or lost tissue by connective tissue that lacks some of the functions of the original tissue.

Seen with full-thickness wounds with skin loss through the epidermis, dermis, into the subcutaneous tissues, and possible bone, muscle, and tendon involvement.

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15
Q

What is the main function of phase 1 hemostasis?

A

Coagulation and secretion of growth factors.

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16
Q

What is the main function of inflammatory phase?

A

To remove debris.

17
Q

What are fibroblasts?

A

Cells responsible for new extracellular matrix and collagen structures to support other cells and contracting the wounds.

18
Q

How does the body respond during proliferation phase?

A

Granulation, contraction and epithelium coverage.