Wound Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Wound – any disruption of skin, mucosa, or organ tissue.
Acute vs. Chronic – Acute: predictable healing, usually < 3 mo. Chronic: stalls in one or more phases, persists > 3 mo.
Open vs. Closed – Open breaches skin; closed damages tissue beneath an intact skin surface.
Healing Phases – Hemostasis (minutes‑hours), Inflammatory (1‑3 days), Proliferation (days‑1 mo), Remodeling (12 mo‑2 yr).
Classification Systems – CDC surgical wound (clean → dirty/infected), Gustilo‑Anderson (open fractures), Tscherne (soft‑tissue injury), AO/OTA (numeric fracture code).
Key Terms – Necrotic tissue: dead tissue (eschar = black, slough = yellow‑creamy). Granulation: pink, vascular tissue filling defect. Exudate: wound fluid; amount guides dressing choice.
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📌 Must Remember
Chronic wound definition: > 3 months without progression.
CDC wound classes: Clean, Clean‑contaminated, Contaminated, Dirty/infected.
Gustilo‑Anderson Types: I (< 1 cm, clean), II (> 1 cm, no extensive loss), IIIA (adequate periosteal cover), IIIB (needs flap), IIIC (arterial repair).
ABI/TBI cut‑off for PAD: ABI < 0.9 (or toe‑brachial index).
Irrigation volume: $50\text{–}100\ \text{mL/cm}$ wound length with normal saline.
NPWT pressure range: $-75$ to $-125\ \text{mm Hg}$.
Pressure‑induced ischemia: > 30 mm Hg for > 2 h → tissue necrosis.
PUSH score: Lower score = healing; combines size, exudate, tissue type.
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🔄 Key Processes
Hemostasis
Vessel spasm → platelet plug → fibrin clot (minutes‑hours).
Inflammation
Neutrophils (0‑24 h) → macrophages (days 1‑3) clean debris, release cytokines.
Proliferation
Fibroblast migration, collagen deposition, angiogenesis, granulation, epithelial cell migration.
Remodeling
Collagen type III → type I, tensile strength ↑, scar matures (12 mo‑2 yr).
Debridement (selective)
Assess → choose technique (autolytic, mechanical, enzymatic, sharp, biological) → remove necrosis → re‑assess.
Primary Closure Decision
Evaluate contamination, vascularity, time since injury, patient comorbidities → close within “golden period” if clean & well‑vascularized.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
Incised vs. Laceration – Clean cut by sharp object vs. irregular tear from blunt force.
Primary vs. Delayed Primary Closure – Immediate edge approximation vs. 3–5 day delay for drainage/ infection control.
Autolytic vs. Enzymatic Debridement – Body’s own enzymes in moist environment vs. topical collagenase applied externally.
Gauze vs. Foam Dressings – Highly absorbent, may adhere → painful removal vs. semi‑occlusive, absorbent inner layer, less trauma.
Clean vs. Contaminated (CDC) – No break in sterile technique vs. major breach or dirty trauma.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All acute wounds close within 6 h.” – No absolute cut‑off; closure depends on contamination and patient factors.
“Tap water is unsafe for wound irrigation.” – Low‑risk wounds may be irrigated with tap water; sterile saline is gold standard.
“All slough must be removed surgically.” – Autolytic or enzymatic methods can safely clear slough.
“Negative pressure always speeds healing.” – Benefits are greatest for large defects, graft fixation, or infection control; not indicated for all wounds.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“The 4‑S Rule for Wound Assessment” – Size, Shape, Surface (tissue type), Surrounding skin → quick snapshot of severity.
“Healing as a Construction Project” – Hemostasis = foundation laying, Inflammation = site cleanup, Proliferation = building walls (granulation), Remodeling = interior finishing (collagen remodeling).
“Pressure‑Perfusion Balance” – When external pressure > capillary perfusion pressure (≈ 30 mm Hg), tissue dies → think of a clogged hose.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Deep tissue infection – Surface swab may miss organisms; deep tissue biopsy is gold standard.
High‑dose iodine – Cytotoxic; dilute to 10 % (1 % available iodine) for safety.
Diabetic foot ulcers – May be neuropathic (painless) or neuro‑ischemic (painful, ischemic signs).
Sharp debridement in coagulopathy – May cause bleeding; consider enzymatic/autolytic alternatives.
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📍 When to Use Which
Irrigation: Low‑pressure saline for all wounds; pulsatile flow when heavy bacterial load suspected.
Debridement Technique:
Autolytic – moist, low‑exudate chronic wounds.
Mechanical – heavily exudative, need rapid bulk removal.
Enzymatic – patients who cannot tolerate surgery.
Sharp – urgent removal of necrosis, contaminated wounds.
Biological – chronic ulcers with abundant slough, patient consents.
Dressings:
Hydrocolloid – moderate exudate, need moist environment.
Foam – heavy exudate, need absorbency + protection.
Alginate/Hydrofiber – very heavy exudate (> 10 mL/24 h).
Film – low exudate, need visualization.
NPWT – large defects, graft fixation, infection control.
Closure Method:
Primary – clean, minimal tissue loss, within 6–8 h if favorable.
Delayed Primary – contaminated or high‑risk infection.
Secondary Intention – large tissue loss, infection, or patient contraindications.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Staged ulcer pattern” – Venous ulcers → shallow, irregular, medial malleolus; Arterial ulcers → well‑demarcated, painful, distal toe; Neuropathic ulcers → painless, callused base.
“Red‑flag infection signs” – Pain > appearance, foul odor, increasing erythema, warmth, purulent exudate.
“Exudate‑dressing mismatch” – Excessive drainage with gauze → consider foam/alginate; minimal drainage with film → may be over‑moist.
“Edge morphology clues” – Rolled edges → chronic, non‑healing; sharp, everted edges → recent incised wound.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
Distractor: “All contaminated wounds must be classified as dirty/infected.” – Incorrect: CDC separates contaminated (fresh, major break) from dirty/infected (old, devitalized tissue).
Distractor: “Povidone‑iodine 10 % is the safest concentration for all wounds.” – Incorrect: Full‑strength iodine is cytotoxic; dilute to 1 % available iodine for most uses.
Distractor: “Negative pressure therapy is contraindicated in all infected wounds.” – Incorrect: NPWT can be used with appropriate antimicrobial dressings; absolute contraindications are untreated osteomyelitis, malignancy, exposed vessels.
Distractor: “Primary closure must be done within 6 h after injury.” – Incorrect: No rigid cut‑off; decision based on contamination, tissue viability, and patient status.
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