Classification and Management of Wound, Principle of Wound Healing, Haemorrhage and Bleeding Control
Classification and Management of Wound, Principle of Wound Healing, Haemorrhage and Bleeding Control
Classification and Management of Wound, Principle of Wound Healing, Haemorrhage and Bleeding Control
GYÖRGYI SZABÓ
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
DEPARTMENT OF SURGICAL
RESEARCH AND TECHNIQUES
WOUND
What is a wound?
3
Simple wound
Compound wound
Acute
Chronic
Parts of the wound
4
Wound edge Wound
corner
Surface of
the wound
(v. lacerocontusum)
Mechanical wound
11
aperture output
Ragged wound
Crushed tissue
Torn
Infection
Bone fracture
Prevention of rabies
Tetanus profilaxis
The direction of the flap
13
Distal Proximal
bone marrow
gastrointestinal tract
Wounds caused by thermal forces
16
1.) Burning
2.) Freezing
Metabolic change! - toxemia mild, moderate, severe (redness,
a – normal skin
bullas, necrosis)
rewarm – not only the frozen area
1 - 1st degree – superficial injury
(epidermis) but the whole body
2 – 2nd degree –partial or deep partial
thickness (epidermis+superficial or deep
dermis)
3 – 3rd degree – full thickness (epidermis
+ entire dermis)
4 – 4th degree – (skin + subcutaneous
tissue + muscle and bone)
Treatment:
Clean wound
Clean-contaminated wound
Contaminated wound
Heavily contaminated wound
Classification of the wounds
2. Depending on the depth of injury
19
Superficial
Partial thickness
Full thickness
Deep wound
source: http://www.funscrape.com/Search/1/skin+layers.html
Wound management - history
20
Ancient Egypt – lint (fibrous base-wound site closure), animal grease (barrier)
and honey (antibiotic)
„closing the wound preserved the soul”
Greeks – acute wound= „fresh” wound; chronic wound = „non-healing” wound
maintaining wound-site moisture
Ambroise Paré – hot oil oil of roses and turpentine, ligature of arteries
instead of cauterization
Lister pretreated surgical gauze – Robert Wood Johnson 1870s; gauze and
wound dressings treated with iodide
Applied wound management -
colour continuum
21
Viscosity
volume high - 5 medium - 3 low - 1
high - 5
medium -3
low - 1
Surgical incision
Stretch and fix
Handling the scalpel
Langer lines
Skin edges
Vessels and nerves
Hemostasis
Langer lines source: http://www.med-
ars.it/galleries/langer.htm
Skin:
Stiches
Clips
Steri-Strips
Tissue glues
Fascia and subcutaneous layers:
Interrupted stiches
Fat – fat necrosis!
capillaries
fibroblasts
lymphocytes
macrophages
neutrophyl gr.
thrombocytes
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 10 13 14 15
http://www.worldwidewounds.com/2004/august/Enoch/images/enochfig1.jpg
The main steps of the wound healing
29
1. Hemostasis-inflammation 2. Granulation-proliferation
vasoconstriction fibroblast migration
fibrin clot formation collagen deposition
angiogensis
proinflammatory citokines and granulation tissue formation
growth factors releasing epithelisation
contraction
vasodilatation 3. Remodelling
infiltration PMNs, macrophages regression of many capillaries
physical contraction – myofibroblasts
collagen degeneration and synthetisation
cytokines releasing
new epithelium
→ angiogensis tensile strength – max. 80%
→ fibroblast activation
→ B- and T-cells activation
→ keratinocytes activation
→ wound contraction
Types of wound healing
30
Healing by primary
intention
Healing by secondary
intention
Healing by tertiary
intention
source: http://quizlet.com/13665246/chapter-3-tissue-renewal-regeneration-
and-repair-flash-cards/
Factors affecting wound healing
31
Local Systemic
Ischemia Age and gender
Infection Sex hormones
Foreign body Stress
Edema, elevated Ischemia
tissue pressure Diseases
Obesity
Hyperbaric oxygen Medication
treatment Alcoholism and smoking
Immunocompromised
conditions
infection Nutrition
foreign IMPAIRED
ischemia
bodies HEALING
edema/
elevated
tissue
pressure
Complications of wound healing
I. Early complications
32
Seroma
Hematoma
Wound disruptin
Superficial wound infection
Deep wound infection
Mixed wound infection
Early complications of wound healing
33
TREATMENT:
U-shaped sutures
Early complications of wound healing
Superficial wound infection
35
TREATMENT TREATMENT
Resting position
Surgical exploration
Antibiotic
Drainage
Dermatological consultation
X-ray examination
e.g. gangrene
necrotic tissues
putrid and anaerobic
infection
a severe clinical picture
TREATMENT
aggresive surgical
debridement
effective and specified
(antibiotic) therapy
Complications of wound healing
II. Late complications
38
Hyperthrophic scar
Keloid formation
Necrosis
Inflammatory infiltration
Abscesses
Foreign body containing abscesses
Late complications
39