Chapter 76 Open Wounds Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four steps of wound healing?

And what are the four phases of wound healing?

A

Steps of wound healing

  1. Fibrin-platelet clot
  2. WBC recuitment
  3. Neovascularization + cell proliferation
  4. Tissue remodelling

Phases of wound healing

    1. Inflammation
    1. Debridement
    1. Repair
    1. Maturation
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2
Q

How long do neutrophils predomnate in the wound?

A

5 days after injury, then mononuclear cells predominate

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3
Q

How long does it take for some of the fibroblasts to transform into myofibroblasts (–> wound contraction)

A

Approx 7d

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4
Q

List 6 ‘types’ of wound

A
  1. Abrasion
  2. Puncture
  3. Laceration
  4. Degloving (anatomic = skin gone, physiologic = skin lifted off base)
  5. Thermal burn
  6. Decubital ulcer
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5
Q

Define:

Contamination

Colonization

Infection

A

Contamination: Presence of microbes on surface

Colonization: Surface microorganisms replicating

Infection: Invasion and replication of microbes in tissue

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6
Q

What bacterial burden is considered the threshold for development of infection?

In what time frame does this occur?

A

105 cfu/g

6 hours

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7
Q

How is the ‘conceptual effect’ of microbial burden ‘calculated

A

(No of microorganisms x virulence)

_____________________________

Host resistance

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8
Q

List + describe the 4 types of wound closure

A
  1. Primary closure
  2. Delayed primary closure: Closure before granulation tissue (3-5d after wounding)
  3. Secondary closure: Closure over granulation tissue.
  4. Second intention healing (i.e. by contraction and epithelialisation)
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9
Q

List 8 factors to consider when deciding re wound management

A
  1. Time since injury
  2. Degree of contamination
  3. Extent of ST damage
  4. Ability to debride/excise
  5. Blood supply
  6. Systemic wellness
  7. Ability to close
  8. Consequences of open wound management
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10
Q

Name two tests that should be performed in a chronic wound

A

Histo (e.g. neoplasia, sterile panniculitis) and culture (Mycobacterium)

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11
Q

What are the thresholds for low, high and jet pressure irrigation?

A

<5psi low

>5-8psi high

70 psi jet

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12
Q

What is the characteristic of microbial infection in acute vs chronic wound

A

Acute more likely to be due to one dominating microorganism, chronic more liekly to be polymicrobial

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13
Q

Broadly outline how tobias would recommend ‘managing’ an acute wound

A
  1. Large vol lavage (balanced electrolyte not cytotoxic)
  2. Protect wound until sx and during clipping
  3. Debridement (usually by surgery)
  4. Once granulation bed, ensure moist wound healing environment e.g. hydrogel if minimally exudative vs hydrocolloid or alginate if exudative
  5. +- consider addition of antimicrobial strategy - topical ointment (recommended in acute phase), silver impregnated,
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14
Q

List 4 antimicrobial properties of honey:

A
  1. Hyperosmolar
  2. Produces hydrogen peroxide
  3. Phytochemicals
  4. Low pH (3.2 - 4.5)

Medical grade honey rated according to inhibin number = amount of dilution to which honey will retain antibacterial activity.

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15
Q

What species of maggot is used in wound debridement and why?

A

Lucilia sericata

Don’t damage healthy dermis and sc tissues (but can destroy healthy epithelium so need to protect epithelium)

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16
Q

List 2 examples of bioscaffolds?

When would a bioscaffold typically be used?

A

Porcine submucosa, hydrolized bovine collagen, chitosan

Indicated for chronic indolent wounds

17
Q

What is the pore sixe of NPWT gauze/foam?

A

400-600 um pore

18
Q

What pressure is recommended in NPWT

A
  • 125 mmHg with foam (and generally)
  • 80 mmHg with gauze
  • 65-75 mmHg over grafts
19
Q

Aside from surgically, list 4 methods of wound debridement:

A
  1. Hyperosmotic = hypertonic dressing, honey, sugar
  2. Maggots (Lucilia sericata)
  3. Enzymatic (usually for chronic wounds only - expensive and non-selective)
  4. Mechanical wet to dry dressings - non-selective debridement (use discouraged)