soft tissue injuries Flashcards

1
Q

what is in the dermis

A

nerve, sweat gland, blood vessel

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2
Q

what is in the epidermis

A

barrier to bacteria + other organisms

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3
Q

how to wash a wound

A

with saline water or under running water for 3-5min

Disinfect periphery of wound with clear anti-septic solution

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4
Q

when can we use anti-septic solution

A

-Is okay for cleaning
of “small” minor wounds.
-Not really meant for wound bed cleansing as products are cytolytic.
-More effective for peri-wound cleansing.

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5
Q

warning for wound wash saline

A

don’t store at temperature above 120F, single patient use only

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6
Q

what are the three type of tetanus shots

A

Diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (DTaP).

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7
Q

what is tetanus

A

Tetanus is a disease caused by a bacterial infection.
The tetanus bacteria gets in a wound through a break in the skin (cut, puncture wound, deep scrape, deep burn) or mucous membrane.

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8
Q

what tetanus do to you

A

The bacteria makes a toxin that causes severe muscle spasms and seizures. Tetanus is also called “lockjaw” because muscle spasms in your jaw make it hard to open your mouth, difficult to swallow or breathe.

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9
Q

wound sealants

A

glustitch
dermabond
J&J liquid bandage
mastisol
compound benzoin tincture
steri-strip
opsite spray

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10
Q

when we use skin glue what should we do day 1-5 and 5-10

A

DAY 1-5 Keep wound dry.
DAY 5-10 Okay to wash the wound.
Do not soak in water for long periods of time as this
could make the glue come off, or reopen the wound

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11
Q

after how long can the athlete wash his hair if he have skin glue on head

A

5 days

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12
Q

can we put bandaid on skinglue

A

no

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13
Q

can we put lotion on skin glue

A

no

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14
Q

after how long the skin glue will come off by itself

A

7-10days

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15
Q

when to seek help with skin glue

A

-Splits open again
-Starts to bleed.
- Infected: red or swollen,
increase pain discharge or pus fever

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16
Q

when do we use opsite spray-sealant

A

Minor cuts and abrasions
Over dry sutured wounds
After suture removal
Can help to protect unbroken blisters
Can help to protect the skin from friction/blisters

17
Q

where can’t we put glue product

A

around eyes

18
Q

can we remove impaled object

A

no expect in cheek/jaw or affect airway

19
Q

management of amputed limb

A
  • Control bleeding- easier with complete vs partial
  • Sterile/diaper bandage over stump and severed
    amputated part
  • Keep amputated part (gauze on wound) in a dry plastic bag on ice (tissue should not be in contact)
  • Transport part immediately with victim when possible
20
Q

with partial avulsion do we remove the flap

A

no we use to close wound

21
Q

how do we stop the burning process for dry chemical burn

A
  • Brush powder off first before flushing with water
22
Q

how do we stop the burning process for phenol/carbolic acid burn

A

flush with alcohol before water

23
Q

for managing thermal burn for toes and finger how do we wrap them

A

individually

24
Q

how do we stop the burning process

A

flush with cool water up to 15min

25
Q

what to do with dressing if burn < 10% BSA

A

WET dressings may stay on until arrival at ER. WET dressings help decrease pain

26
Q

what to do with dressing if burn >10% BSA

A

WET dressings applied no longer than 15 minutes “Fire is out” - Large burns have risk of shock.
DRY sterile dressing to protect and insulate sheet or clean sheet
shock prevention a priority

27
Q
A