Comparative Wound Healing Flashcards

1
Q

Expectation for stages of wound healing

A
  1. Hemostasis - injury/initial bleeding
  2. Inflammation -
  3. Proliferation - fill in wound space
  4. Remodeling
    Stages overlap and vary in length
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2
Q

Cell types at each healing stage

A

Hemostasis - platelets, neutrophils - transition into macro
Inflammation - monocyte/macro
Proliferation - fibroblast
Remodeling - myofibroblasts, lymphocytes

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3
Q

Hemostasis

A

Platelates are the major cell - responsible for clotting the initial hemorrhage, fibrin clot forms
Vasoconstriction reduce blood loss

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4
Q

Preparation for inflammatory phase

A

Platelets activated by tissue damage /bleeding
Activated platelets degranulate which release growth factors and cytokines which recruit leukocytes

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5
Q

Inflammation

A

Purpose of stage is cell recruitment and tissue debridement
Vascular & cellular phase - vasoD, ^^ capillary perm to enable cell migration
stage we can have the most influence - assist w cleaning, antibiotic Tx

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6
Q

Leukocyte emigration

A

Neutrophils enter the chat in the first 24-48 hrs & phagocytize bacteria, tissue debris & release proteases
Macrophages - 3-5d post injury. Essential for healing, phag necrotic tissue/bacteria, initiate healing process via cytokines & chemoattractant = recruiting fibroblasts, mesenchymal stem cells

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7
Q

Types of tissue trauma & debridement

A

Blunt vs sharp - loose worse before better
Phagocytosis, enzymatic degradation & mechanical debridement

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8
Q

Proliferation

A

Main cell type - fibroblasts
Neovascularization - creation of new blood vessels
Granulation tissue formation - very vascular, resistant to infection, disorganized collagen, protects underlying tissue, forms scaffolding

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9
Q

Healing in proliferation

A

Granulation - filling in wound
Epithelialization (begin to cover defect) - fragile skin
Wound contraction - reduction in wound size
- mediated by myofibroblasts in granulation tissue

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10
Q

Remodeling

A

Purpose to increase wound function & strength
Main cell type- fibroblasts/myofibroblasts
Collagen reorganization + cross linking = increased collagen, cells rearrange to support more tension

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11
Q

Length of each healing stage

A

Hemostasis: 0-12 hours
Inflammation: 6h -3-5 days (more w severe wounds)
Proliferation: 4-21 days (more w severe wounds)
Remodeling: 21 days - 2 years

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12
Q

Healing of simple surgical incision

A

3-4 days: incision weakest, held by suture
7-14 days: ^ tensile but only 10% of normal, dehiscence most likely to occur here
14-21 days: increases to 20% of normal strength
21-42 days: rapid increase 60-70% of normal strength
>42 days: slower increase to ≥ 80% of normal strength

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13
Q

Surgical wound classifications

A

Clean
Clean contaminated
Contaminated
Dirty

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14
Q

Clean wounds

A

Infection rate = 0-3.5%
Non traumatic wounds
No inflammation, no breaks in sterility, luminal organs aren’t entered, lumen of GI, GIU or respt aren’t entered

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15
Q

Clean contaminated wounds

A

Infection rate ~ 4.5%
Enters luminal organs, no sign spillage, resection anastomatosis
Common w gastronomy or cystotomy

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16
Q

Contaminated wounds

A

Infection rate = 5.8-14.6%
Major breaks in surgery tech, gross spillage of GI, fresh traumatic wounds, enter urinary or biliary tract

17
Q

Dirty wounds

A

Gross infection present at time of surgery, traumatic wounds with devitalized tissue, intestinal perforation &/or peritonitis

18
Q

Types of wound closure

A

First intention healing & second intention healing

19
Q

First intention healing

A

Fresh, uncomplicated surgical incision
- spay, exploratory laparotomy
Clean, a traumatic wound with minimal tissue, <6h old, minimal contamination

20
Q

Delayed primary closure

A

Primary wound closure occurs before granulation tissue formation. Will achieve 1st intention healing but delayed by 1-4 days. Common in cases delayed

21
Q

Steps with treating delayed primary closure

A
  1. Lavage
  2. Gentle debridement
  3. Fresh bleeding wound margins & underlying subQ tissue
  4. Wound closure to appose skin edges
22
Q

1st intention - secondary closure

A

Secondary would occur after granulation tissue formation
Also achieves 1st int but delayed ≥5 days
Cases presenting for delayed treatment
Severely contaminated wounds or sig tissue trauma

23
Q

Second intention healing

A

Wound healing without surgical closure
Significant tissue trauma + contamination
Common with tissue loss/necrosis, exposed bone, tendon, ligament. Granulation tissue bridges the gaps in skin

24
Q

Wound size in 2nd intention healing

A

Wound size reduces by contraction & epithelialization
Substantial epithelialization results in large areas of fragile skin - no protection
Contraction stops once tension of skin overtakes the myofibroblasts capacity
Skin grafting may be necessary for success