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Types of Wounds NTH

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
232 views29 pages

Types of Wounds NTH

Uploaded by

King Ragnar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Wound

Two basic types of wounds :


 Open wound : the surface of the skin or
mucous membrane is no longer intact.
 Closed wound : no opening in the skin or
mucous membrane .
Classification of wound
Open wound
• Incisions or incised wound
• Laceration
• Abrasion
• Avulsion
• Ulceration
• Penetrating wound – e.g. Gunshot injury
Closed wound
• Contusion
Open wounds
• Incision wounds :
clean separation of skin & tissue with
smooth , even edges
Abrasion
o Skin scraped against
a rough surface
o Several layers of
skin are torn loose
or totally removed
o Usually more painful
than a deeper cut
because scraping of
skin exposes
millions of nerve
endings
• Lacerations :
separation of skin & tissue in which the
edges are torn & irregular
Laceration
Laceration
Avulsion
o Layers of skin torn off completely or
only flap of skin remains
o Same mechanism as laceration, but
to extent that tissue is completely
ripped from it’s source
o May be considerable bleeding
Puncture Wound
o Penetration of skin by sharp object
o Nails, tacks, ice picks, knives, teeth,
needles

o Can become infected easily because


dirt and bacteria are carried deep in
the tissue
Contusion
o A blow compresses or crushes the
skin surface and produces bleeding
under the skin
o Does not break skin
o Bruising due to injury to blood
vessels
Contusion—Signs & Symptoms
o Swelling o Ecchymosis
o Tenderness o accumulation of
o Redness blood in skin &
subcutaneous
tissue more than
one cm in diameter

o Bluish lesion at
earliest stage of
onset
Wound Classification
• Predicts risk of postoperative infection
based on assessment of bacterial
load at time of surgery
• Assists surgeon determine his/her
approach to postop care
CDC Surgical Wound Classification

Clean: (1-5% risk of infection)


• Uninfected operative wounds in which no
inflammation is encountered and the
respiratory, alimentary, genital, or urinary tracts
are not entered.
• Clean wounds are primarily closed.
• Operative incisional wounds that follow non
penetrating (blunt) trauma should be included
in this category if they meet the criteria.
Wound Class I: Clean
• Respiratory, gastrointestinal, genital and
urinary tracts not entered
• No break in aseptic technique
• No inflammation
• Infections that occur in clean wounds are
largely a result of gram-positive organisms
such as Staphylococcus aureus.
• Examples of a clean wound include
incisions made for hernia repair,
exploratory laparotomy without bowel
resection, mastectomy, or vascular bypass
graft harvest
CDC Surgical Wound Classification

Clean-contaminated: (5-15% infection risk)


• Operative wounds in which the respiratory,
alimentary, genital, or urinary tract is entered
under controlled conditions and without unusual
contamination.
• Operations involving the biliary tract, appendix,
vagina, and oropharynx are included in this
category, provided no evidence of infection or
major break in technique is encountered.
Wound Class II: Clean-Contaminated

• Respiratory, gastrointestinal, genital, or


urinary tract is entered under controlled
conditions
• No major break in aseptic technique
• No acute inflammation
• No spillage
• The risk of developing an infection from a
clean/contaminated wound is
approximately 5% to 15%
• Examples of procedures classified as
clean/contaminated include hysterectomy,
colectomy, lung lobectomy, or
cholecystectomy.
CDC Surgical Wound Classification

Contaminated: (10-17% risk)


• Open, fresh, accidental wounds, operations with
major breaks in sterile technique or gross
spillage from the gastrointestinal tract.
• Incisions in which acute, nonpurulent
inflammation is encountered.
Wound Class III: Contaminated
• Acute, nonpurulent inflammation is encountered
• Open, fresh, accidental wounds
• Operations with major breaks in sterile technique
• Visible spillage from intestinal tract
• Necrotic tissue without evidence of purulent drainage
• Examples of procedures that result in a
contaminated wound include
appendectomy for acute appendicitis,
open cardiac massage, or
cholecystectomy with acute inflammation
and bile spillage
CDC Surgical Wound Classification

Dirty: (>30% infection risk)


• Old traumatic wounds with retained devitalized
tissue and those that involve existing clinical
infection or perforated viscera.
• This definition suggests that the organisms
causing postoperative infection were present in
the operative field before the operation.
Wound Class IV: Dirty/Infected

• Presence of purulence or abscess


• Perforated viscera
• Fecal contamination
• Traumatic wounds with retained
devitalized tissue
• Wet gangrene
• Examples of procedures in which the
wound is dirty/infected include:
appendectomy for a ruptured appendix,
appendectomy in the presence of pus,
surgical treatment of an abscess, repair of
a perforated bowel or perforated gastric
ulcer.
Risk of Developing Postsurgical Infection
Classification of Wounds Closure
• Healing by Primary Intention:
– All Layers are closed. The incision that heals by
primary intention does so in a minimum amount of time,
with no separation of the wound edges, and with
minimal scar formation.
• Healing by Secondary Intention:
– Deep layers are closed but superficial layers are left to
heal from the inside out. Healing by secondary
intention is appropriate in cases of infection, excessive
trauma, tissue loss.
• Healing by Tertiary Intention:
– Also referred to as delayed primary closure.
Factors Delaying Wound Healing
General factors
• poor diet • Jaundice
• anaemia • malignant disease
• pulmonary disease • Uremia
• cardiac insufficiency • drug therapy e.g.
• arteriosclerosis steroids and cytotoxic
• diabetes mellitus • radiotherapy
• smoking
Factors Delaying Wound Healing
Local factors

• skin edges not lined up • infection


• dead tissue in wound • irritant material for
• foreign bodies in wound suturing
• tension on wound • too tight suturing
• Placement of foreign
body
• Hip/knee replacement,
heart valve insertion,
shunt insertion

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