Wounds Flashcards

1
Q

Wound definition

A

Defect or damage in skin caused by chemicals, physical forces, thermal causes or disease

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2
Q

2 broad classifications

A

Wound without tissue loss: eg surgery

Wound with tissue loss: eg trauma or burn wounds

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3
Q

Incisions

A

Regular wound

Caused by a clean sharp edged object

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4
Q

Laceration

A

Rough and irregular wound

Caused by crushing or ripping

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5
Q

Abrasion (graze)

A

Superficial wound where top layers of skin are lost

Caused by sliding on a rough surface

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6
Q

Puncture

A

Caused by sharp pointed object punching skin

Chance of anaerobic bacteria infection

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7
Q

Penetration wounds

A

Caused by entering the body

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8
Q

Avulsion

A

When the integrity of any tissue in the body is compromised

Where something is basically torn off

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9
Q

Contusions

A

A bruise

Caused by blunt force trauma

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10
Q

Haematoma

A

Caused by damage to blood vessel

Blood then accumulates under the skin

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11
Q

3 phases of healing

A

1) Inflammatory
2) Proliferative
3) Remodelling

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12
Q

Inflammatory phase

A

Bleeding first to remove toxins

Vasoconstriction begins to stop bleeding

Coagulation initiated by platelets forming fibrin network

Phagocytes engulf dead cells in the wound

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13
Q

Proliferative phase

A

Granulation tissue builds up in wound space due to fibroblasts and macrophages providing growth factors. (Occurs 2-3 days after wound occurs)

This stimulates fibroplasia and angiogenesis (new blood vessels)

Fibroplasia causes a bed of collagen to fill defect, pulling wound edges together

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14
Q

Remodelling phase

A

3 weeks after wound occurs

Fibroblasts spur on greater collagen formation which forms a helical structure with inter and intra X links

The tissue will not regain the properties of uninjured tissue

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15
Q

What pericytes?

A

Pericytes can differentiate into myofibroblasts

Vascular pericytes can enter the wound bed and can assume a more contractile and matrix depositing phenotype

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16
Q

Petroleum impregnated dressing

A

For clean, healthy and shallow wounds
Use at early stages of wound repair

Use non adhering dressings for exuding wounds such as burns

17
Q

Hydrogel dressings

A

Hydrogel sheets- for shallow wounds
Can maintain moisture balance while absorbing exudates

Hydrogel gels- for cavities, good for debriding and dislodging

They donate moisture
Promotes collagenase activity, granulation, epithelisation and contraction

18
Q

Hypercolloid dressings

A

For early to mid repair wounds
Reduces pain and promotes angiogenesis

Used where granulation is necessary
For minimal to moderate exudation

Promotes moist wound healing and granulation

19
Q

Foam dressings

A

Non adherent

Absorbs large amounts of exudates

For deep wounds with mild to moderate exudates

Best used after granulation to encourage epithelisation and contraction

20
Q

Alginate dressings

A

Made brown algae

Good gel/film forming properties

Calcium alginate promotes clotting cascade (10x faster compared to petroleum dressings)

For burns, shearing/avulsion, cavity wounds

Best for moderate to highly exuding wounds

21
Q

Film dressings

A

Semi permeable allowing fluid to evaporate whilst still keeping wound moist

Comfortable and resistant to wear/tear

Prevents bacterial colonisation but does not absorb exudate

22
Q

Natural polymers

A

Usually protein or polysaccharide in nature

Bio-compatible, degradable and hydrophilic

Does however vary batch to batch and can degrade way too fast

23
Q

Collagen dressings

A

The protein is made of three peptide chains with triple helical domains

Promotes healing via attachment and migration

Dry collagen physically absorbs blood and traps them which adheres them to the wound site giving mechanical strength

24
Q

Chitosan dressings

A

Made by acetylating chitin

Active in slightly acidic media and releases beta 1-4 linked-D-glucosamine (used for hemorrhage control)

Promotes fibroblasts, collagen deposition and platelet/RBC mobilisation as well as vasoconstriction

Good film forming properties