WOUND CARE Flashcards

1
Q

Acute wound

A

intentional or uninentional

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2
Q

closed wound

A

no break in skin

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3
Q

open wound

A

break in skin

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4
Q

3 conditions associated with chronic wounds

A

venous disease, arterial disease, neuropathic disease

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5
Q

True or false? surgical wounds are acute and intentional.

A

true.

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6
Q

4 classifications of surgical wounds

A

clean
clean-contaminated
contaminated
dirty

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7
Q

What causes moisture-associated skin damage?

A

skin exposure to irritants

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8
Q

can moisture-associated skin damage lead to pressure injuries?

A

yes

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9
Q

combination of friction and pressure commonly associated with Fowler’s positon

A

shearing forces

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10
Q

excoriation

A

secondary to fecal matter and being wet, exudate, deep skin folds, etc

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10
Q

maceration

A

think of the ceviche, the soaking in acidic fluid caused the food to macerate (cook) except we don’t want our skin to cook

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11
Q

3 pressure related factors

A

pressure intensity, pressure duration, tissue tolerance

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12
Q

Stage 1 pressure ulcer

A

nonblanching, discloration, skin texture and color inconsistent with surrounding skin

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13
Q

Stage 2 pressure ulcer

A

partial thickness skin loss. pink or red tissue viable in wound bed. tissue is moist, deeper tissues are not visible. may have serum-filled blister

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13
Q

True or False : stage 2 should not be used to describe skin tears, tape burns, incontinence associated dermatitis, maceration or excoriation

A

true

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14
Q

stage 3 pressure ulcer

A

full-thickness skin loss, visible fat, granulation tissue may be present, wound edges may be rolled, dead tissue may have formed, slough may be present, undermining and tunneling may be present

15
Q

Stage 4 pressure injury

A

muscle, fascia, tendons, ligaments, cartilage and/or bone is visible

16
Q

Which stage of pressure injury usually requires surgical repair?

A

4

17
Q

When are DTPI (deep tissue pressure injuries) and ulcers unstageable?

A

when the base of the wound is not visible due to eschar in the wound bed, when there is a mucosal membrane pressure injury

18
Q

hemostatic/inflammatory phase of wound healing

A

lasts up to 5 days. exudate and edema should decrease. scab forms protective barrier so that phagocytosis can occur underneath. in a clean wound, this phase establishes a clean wound bed.

19
Q

when can staples be removes?

A

day 9-14.

20
Q

proliferative phase of wound healing

A

Granulation tissue matures. vascular bed is re-established. collagen added to injury site to strengthen tissue. from 5 days to 14 days.

21
Q

Maturation/ remodeling phase

A

begins day 21 and can last over a year. this is where keloids can form in individuals who have an abnormal amount of collagen formation.

22
Q

complications of wound healing

A

hemorrhage, hematoma, infection, dehiscence, evisceration

23
Q

what to do in the event of evisceration

A

have client flex knees, cover area with a sterile saline soaked dressing

24
Q

risk factors for dehiscence/evisceration

A

obesity, poor surgical technique, poor nutrition, mulitple trauma, suture failure, excessive coughing, infection, vomiting, dehydration. mortality rate 30%

25
Q

Wound irrigation : clean or sterile technique?

A

sterile, required due to break in skin integrity.

26
Q

4 types of wound debridement

A

mechanical, autolytic, chemical, sharp/surgical

27
Q
A