Wound Care:
The Basics
Suzann Williams-Rosenthal, RN, MSN, WOC, GNP
Norma Branham, RN, MSN, WOC, GNP
University of Virginia
May, 2010
What Type of Wound is it?
How long has it been there?
Acute-generally heal in a couple weeks, but
can become chronic:
Surgical
Trauma
Chronic-do not heal by normal repair
process-takes weeks to months:
Vascular-venous stasis, arterial ulcers
Pressure ulcers
Diabetic foot ulcers (neuropathic)
Chronic Wounds
Pressure Ulcer Staging
Where is it?
Where is it located?
Use anatomical location-heel, ankle, sacrum,
coccyx, etc.
Measurements-in centimeters
Length X Width X Depth
Length = greatest length (head to toe)
Width = greatest width (side to side)
Depth = measure by marking the depth with a QTip and then hold to a ruler
Wound Characteristics:
Describe by percentage of each type
of tissue:
Granulation tissue:
red, cobblestone appearance (healing,
filling in)
Necrotic:
Slough-yellow, tan dead tissue
(devitalized)
Eschar-black/brown necrotic tissue, can
be hard or soft
Evaluating additional
tissue damage:
Undermining
Separation of tissue from the surface under
the edge of the wound
Describe by clock face with patients head at 12
(undermining is 1 cm from 12 to 4 oclock)
Tunneling
Channel that runs from the wound edge
through to other tissue
tunneling at 9 oclock, measuring 3 cm long
Wound Drainage and Odor
Exudate
Fluid from wound
Document the amount, type and odor
Light, moderate, heavy
Drainage can be clear, sanguineous (bloody),
serosanguineous (blood-tinged), purulent (cloudy,
pus-yellow, green)
Odor
Most wounds have an odor
Be sure to clean wound well first before
assessing odor (wound cleanser, saline)
Describe as faint, moderate, strong
Condition of Periwound
Consider use of Skin Prep or equivalent
product to protect periwound tissue
Periwound-tissue around wound
Viable, macerated, inflamed
Color-erythema (purple appearance on dark skin),
pale
Texture-dry, moist, boggy (soft), macerated (white,
soggy appearance), edema
Temperature-cool, warm
Skin integrity-lesions, excoriation, maceration,
denuded (loss of epidermis)
Is the wound infected?
All wounds are contaminated, but not necessarily
infected:
Contamination-microorganisms on wound surface
Colonization-bacteria growing in wound bed without
signs or symptoms of infection
Critical colonization-bacterial growth causes delayed
wound healing, but has not invaded the tissue
Infection-bacteria invades soft tissue, causes
systemic response
Inflammation, pus, increase/change in exudate, fever,
pain, delirium in elderly
Other factors that contribute
to wound healing:
Nutrition/hydration
Protein
Circulation
Pressure relief
Oxygenation
No tobacco
Edema
Glucose control - Diabetics
PUP-the highpoints
Minimize friction, sheer, and pressure
Repositioning every 1-2 hours
Necessary even when using specialty beds, in chair
Incontinence
Scheduled toileting
Frequent changing, skin barrier
Nutrition
HOB <30 degrees
Elevate heels
R.D. assessment
Calories, protein, supplements
Education
Staff, resident, families
Dressings-The Basics
DO:
Relieve pain, especially prior to dressing change
RELIEVE PRESSURE!
TURN AT LEAST EVERY 1-2 HOURS!
Consider specialty support surfaces for bed/chair
Fill in dead space if wound is deep
Protect skin from incontinence by using barrier cream
Protect periwound tissue by using Skin Prep
DO NOT:
DO NOT use wet-to-dry dressings!
DO NOT wrap tape completely around an extremity!
Tourniquet effect
DO NOT pull dressing off a wound
Can cause further tissue damage
Soak to remove
Dressing selection
Determined by condition of the wound bed
Determine dressing according to amount of
exudate (drainage)
Consider cost and availability of dressings
at your institution $$$$
Assess wound at least every 2 weeks and
change treatment if not improved
If not healing or questions about dressing
selection, consult WOC nurse
Cleansing the wound bed:
Be gentle!
Saline or wound cleanser
Eliminating necrotic
tissue:
Necrotic tissue increases bioburden
Debridement-remove devitalized tissue
Contamination vs. colonization vs. infection
Autolytic-bodys enzymes in drainage
Enzymatic-Santyl
Sharp-surgical
Biologic-maggots
If malodorous wound, try Xeroform gauze or
Flagyl gel
Management of devitalized
tissue
Eschar-black necrotic tissue
Slough-soft, moist,
avascular tissue
Firm, dry, stable eschar should not be
debrided from heels
May not have adequate circulation to
heal wound
Dressings:
Manage drainage while maintaining a moist
environment
Maceration
Excoriation
Basically 5 categories:
Films
Hydrogel
Hydrocolloids
Alginates
Foam
Dressings that add
moisture
Films-retain moisture, protect from
infection
Hydrogel-creates moist environment,
not for excessive drainage
Hydrocolloid-moist environment,
promotes autolytic debridement
Dressings that absorb
moisture
Foams for moderate drainage
Calcium alginate for moderate to
heavy drainage, hemostasis
Control of wound
bioburden:
Antimicrobial dressings for wound
contamination
Antibiotics only for infected wounds (not just
colonized/contaminated)
Cultures not generally recommended
because all wounds are contaminated
If culture indicated, cleanse wound bed with
saline, then express drainage from wound
bed.
Specialty Dressings
Antimicrobial dressings
Silver
Cadexomer iodine
Specialty Treatments
Vacuum-assisted wound treatments
Hyperbaric oxygen treatment
Websites
John A. Hartford Foundation, Institute for Geriatric
Nursing:
http://www.hartfordign.org/index.html
How to Try This: Braden scale video/article/CEUs:
http://www.nursingcenter.com/prodev/ce_article.asp?tid=7514
31
National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel:
http://npuap.org/
Braden Scale:
http://www.bradenscale.com/default.htm
Websites
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality:
Clinical Practice Guidelines:
http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/cpgonline.htm
National Guideline Clearinghouse:
Guideline for prevention and management of
pressure ulcers:
http://www.guideline.gov/summary/summary.aspx?ss=
15&doc_id=3860&nbr=3071