Uploaded by Mohammed Jawad

wounds

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 Break in the integrity of skin and tissue
Or
 An injury to living tissue caused by a cut,
blow, or other impact, in which the skin is
broken.
 It may or may not associated with
destruction of structure or function
Simple wounds
 Only skin layer is affected / break
Complete wounds
 Skin and tissue got broken including Vessels, muscles,
tendons, ligaments, bones
Open wounds
 Underlying tissue or muscles or bones are exposed
Closed wounds
 No problems externally, but internal portions are affected
 Avulsion – complete or partial tearing of skin
 Laceration –a deep cut or tear of skin or flesh
 Puncture – a small hole type of injury by long sharp
objects, pointing needles or objects
 Incision – injury caused by sharp objects like blade,
knife. Bleeding will be profuse
 Abrasion – injury caused by rub or scratch with a rough
area
 Hematoma – any injury to the vessels cause clotting of
blood and accumulation in that area. Thus leads to
hematoma
 Crush injury – by accidental pressures, internal
tissues/ vessels get damaged. Eg- accidents
 Contusion or Bruise – superficial injury due to
accumulation of blood under tissue. (a type of
hematoma)
Clean wound
 There will not be formation of debris and any signs of
inflammation. All clean wounds will heal fast
Contaminated wounds
 Completely with debris and infection. The healing
only takes place with proper wound management
Period of healing
 Acute – heals very fast. Predictable healing period
 Chronic – long term healing eg- diabetic ulcer
Involvement of part
 Superficial thickness – only epidermis is affected
 Partial thickness – includes epidermis and dermis
 Full thickness – all parts of skin along with muscles,
bones with blood vessels and nerves
Surgical wounds
 Clean surgical wounds – no inflammatory reaction
 Clean -contaminated surgical wounds – high risk for
developing inflammation, infection. Ex – chest procedures
 Contaminated wounds – wounds come in contacts with
contaminants
 Infected surgical wounds – wounds delayed treatment
ex- traumatic wounds, wound contact with pus, fecal
matters
Origin
 Internal – due to impaired immune system or
decrease in blood oxygen and nutrients to specialized
cells or due to any external force internal organs are
being injured
 External – by penetrating / non- penetrating causes
the external part is being injured or due to
miscellaneous causes.
Miscellaneous
 Thermal wounds – extreme hot or cold ex- burns
 Chemical wounds – exposure / inhalation to
chemical. Ex- acids or alkali
 Bites and stings
 Electrical – passage of high electrical voltage through
body
 Fundamental property of all living tissues in all species
 Nursing role – florence nightinale’s definition
Preparing a client for the most favorable
conditions for healing.
If the wound involves: Mucus membrane – regeneration will be complete
 Partial /Full thickness – scar will form as a result of
healing
 CNS tissue – no regeneration
 Wound healing is a complex and dynamic (active,
changing and adapting ) process that results in the
restoration of anatomic continuity of structure and
function.
 Components – oxygen, nutrition and growth factors
in blood
1.
Hemostasis (the process of keeping blood inside a
damaged vessel to stop bleeding) and vascular
response
2. Inflammatory phase or process
3. Proliferative or resolution phase
4. Maturation/ reconstruction phase
 Starts within seconds after an injury
 There will be Vasoconstriction immediately after the
injury -to stop bleeding
 Clot formation - with the help of platelets and stops
bleeding
 Plasma protein – forms fibrous mesh work around wound
 Combination of clot with platelets with the mesh work
occurs to minimize bleeding
Capillary dilation / vasodilation
 Dilation of vessels for supply of more blood to the
area. And plasma will also be supplied
 Plasma – phagocytes (macrophages, leukocytes , mast
cells, neutrophills )
 Dilute toxins
 Carry oxygen and nutrients
 Due to all these, redness, warmness occurs
 Starts within 4-6 days
 This phase is a defense mechanism produced by cells
or tissues against the microorganisms
 It limits or eliminate the effects microorganisms
 Walling off effect –in the wounded area, there will be
presence of microorganism. It can spread through the
lymph vessels around it. So The wounded area develops
fibrinogen clots around it and these will block the
lymph vessels and thus reduce the spreading
WBC’S role
 They gets activated in inflammation and infection
 Neutrophills – vital role
 More neutrophills are transported to the wound area.
 Blood vessels are made of endothelium (closely
packed) and the neutrophills reaches and marginate
around the area – marginating / pavementing
 Histamine will produce and they dilate the vessels
and create the space in between the endothelium in
that area.
 Through theses spaces, nutrients and all needed
factors pass to the wound area along with neutrophills
 The transport of neutrophills though the endothelial
space created is called as diapedesis
 Chemotaxis – the process of movement of
neutrophills towards the affected area
 Neutrophills (60% of WBC) are also called as poly
morphonucleus neutrophills- polys
 These are secreted either mature (segmented – segs ) Or
immature (banded – bands )
 The mature ones are phagocytotic
 If more segs are seen in blood tests, indicated increased
phagocytosis
 If immature or bands is high – less phagocytosis and the
problem can be from the bone marrow.
Macrophage –
 Phagocytosis
 Activate within 48 hours after injury
 Removes dead cells or dying cells through phagocytosis
Eosinophills and basophills
 Migrate towards the wounded area
 basophills – secrete histamine
 Antihistamines produced by eosinophills
Mediators of phase II
Mast cells (produced by plasma cell [antibody
producing cells]) – mast cells get activated if any injury
occurs and produces : Histamine
 Serotonin
 Leukotrines
 Prostaglandins – responsible for pain – managed with
aspirin(NSAID’S).
These are vasodilators
Kinins - Kind of plasma proteins.
 Bradykinin – action same as prostaglandins and
produce pain
 It increases vascular permeability also
Cytokines - Generally for growth and maturation of
cells along with immunity development
 Interleukins – growth and development of cells
 Interferones – immunity
This is an overlapping phase
Fibroplasia and Development of granulation tissue –
Fibroblasts – the cells that synthesizes the extracellular
matrix and collagen and plays a critical role in wound
healing
By the end of first week, fibroblast are the main cells in the
wound area
Granulation tissue – they are new connective tissues consist
of tiny blood vessels, fibroblasts, inflammatory cells,
endothelial cells.
Collagen deposition
 Collagens are proteins which helps in generation of
new cells
Angiogenesis (neovascularisation) – development of
new blood vessels
Wound contraction
 Ability of wound edges to come together and to
contract
Epithelialization
Migration of normal
epithelial cells from the
edge of wounds towards
the centre
 Basal epithelial cells at the
wound margin flatten
(mobilize) and migrate
into the open wound
 Basal cells at margin
multiply (mitosis) in
horizontal direction

Epithelialization/Contraction
Epithelialization
Cells activates during IIIrd phase
 Fibroblast – helps in collagen deposition and
granulation tissues
 Myofibroblast – helps in wound contraction
Macrophages – helps in angiogenesis
 It secretes / stimulate certain factors
 PDGF – platelet derived growth factor
 AGF – angiogenitc growth factors
 TGF- transforming growth factors
 It will take weeks, months, years or more
 Formation of scar and its remodeling
 Initially scar will be very tight and dark
 Then thins and becomes white
 In this phase the disorganized collagen fibers are
rearranged and cross linked
 As the phase progress the tensile (ability to stretch)
strength of the wound increases
Probable process of healing. These are
 Primary intention – with suturing of wound. Can heal
the wound without inflammation. ex -incision and
lacerations
 Secondary intention – keeping wound open. By the
time proliferation and maturation occurs slowly and
healing occur by scar tissue formation eventually –
diabetic wound
 Tertiary intention(delayed primary intension) –
the contaminated wounds cant kept closed. So cant
use primary intension. Only after removing the debris
(dead cells) and contaminants primary intension can
adopt.
 Disease conditions
 Diabetes – hyperglycemia can delay developments of
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collagen
Immunosuppressive conditions
Oxygen deficit – anemia, inadequate blood supply,
foreign body
Increased Moisture
Increase age – decrease healing
Increased mobility
Drugs – anticoagulants, - bleeding cant stop
 Lack of Personal hygiene
 Inadequate dressing – too short / too tight
 Nutritional deficiency – vit c – collagen development
 protein – repair and development of new cells
 Zinc – epitheliazation
 Smoking – o2 saturation will decrease and nicotine is
a vasoconstrictor
 Edema – increased interstitial pressure thus
vasoconstriction
 Hypovolemia – decreased oxygen, nutrient by
decrease blood volume
 Hemorrhage – blood loss, accumulation in internal
bleeding favor microbes multiplication.
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