Wounds 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Wound healing - traditional method

A
  • Traditional method was to “leave it open to the air to dry out”
  • Scabs protect the healing wound from ingress of dirt and micro‐organisms
  • Thought that bacteria died through dehydration, thus infection minimised
  • Migrating polymorphonuclear leucocytes can’t get through dry tissue
  • New epithelium forms below wound surface
  • Scarring increased
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2
Q

Properties of Dressings

A

Dressings should ensure that the wound remains:
• Moist with exudate but not macerated
• Free of clinical infection and excessive slough
• Free of toxic chemicals, particles or fibres released by the dressing
• At the optimum temperature for healing to take place
• Undisturbed by frequent or unnecessary dressing changes
• At an optimum pH value

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3
Q

Types of dressing

A
  • Hydrocolloid
  • Foam
  • Alginate
  • Hydrogel
  • Tulle
  • Absorbent
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4
Q

• Hydrocolloids

A

Useful for fragile wounds - only need one dressing, have a hydrophobic backing which is vapour permeable, shower-proof

  • Microgranular suspension of natural or synthetic polymers (e.g. gelatin, pectin) in adhesive matrix (e.g polyisobutylene)
  • Granules semi‐hydrated and hydrophilic
  • Adhesive matrix hydrophobic
  • Slowly absorb fluid from wound, forming cohesive or hydrophilic gel
  • can be cut and layered
  • 2mm - 5mm thick, firm
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5
Q

Foams

A
• Absorbent polyurethane with other compenents:
– Hydrocellular foams 
– Hydropolymer foams 
– Soft silicone foams 
– Foam + silver 
– Foam + charcoal
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6
Q

Alginates

A

• Seaweed based
• Alginicacid: polymer containing
– Mannuronic acid
– Guluronic acid
• Mannuronic rich alginates form soft flexible gels – Can be rinsed away
• Guluronic rich alginates form firm gels – Can be removed in one piece
• Highly absorbent

  • come as dry sheets or ribbons
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7
Q

Hydrogels

A

• Gels with high water content
– Flat gels (sheets)
– Tubes / containers
• Need a secondary dressing

  • add moisture to wound (useful for dead dry tissue to remove it)
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8
Q

Tulles

A
• Medicated or non‐medicated
• Knitted polyester 
– Low adherence
– Open weave
– Allow wounds to dry out 
– Not ideal dressing
  • oldest dressing type (knitted)
  • skin graft usually taken from thigh or stomach
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9
Q

Vapour permeable films

A
  • Sterile
  • Thin
  • Conformable
  • Hypoallergenic
  • Vapour‐permeable
  • Adhesive coated
  • May have absorbent backing
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10
Q

Absorbent dressings

A

• Low adherence primary dressing
– Viscose and rayon absorbent pad with adhesive border
– E.g. Mepore, Primapore

Or

– Plastic film faced dressing
• Perforated polyester film contact layer
• Absorbent cotton pad 
• Hydrophobic backing
– E.g. Melolin
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11
Q

Surgical absorbent dressings

A
• Conventional dry dressings 
– Absorbent Cotton BP
– Gauze
– Lint ( good for fragile dry healthy)
– Only on dry wounds!
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12
Q

Moist wound healing

A
  • Moist wound healing first expostulated during WWII
  • Winter’s study with pig(s) in 1962 demonstrated increased epithelialisation in moist environment
  • Only on superficial wounds, but research was adopted by dressings manufacturers
  • Moist conditions allow epidermal cells to migrate to surface of wound, reducing scarring
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13
Q

Useful for fragile wounds - only need one dressing, have a hydrophobic backing which is vapour permeable, shower-proof

A

Hydrocolloid dressing

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14
Q

Which dressing become more saturated than hydrocolloids

A

foams

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15
Q

Which foam dressing is used for skin draft or burn

A

Soft silicone foams

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16
Q

Which foam dressing is used for antibacterial

A

Foam + silver

17
Q

Which foam dressing is used for antiodour for fungus

A

Foam + charcoal

18
Q
  • useless for epithelising wounds or dry wounds, only useful for damp or wet wounds
A

Alginates

19
Q

primary dressings so will need another dressing on top (eg mepore)

A

Alginates

20
Q

which dressings remove excess moisture but leave wound moist enough so they do not dry out

A
  • alginates, hydrocolloids and foams
21
Q

which dressing is useful for dead dry tissue to remove it

A

hydrogel

22
Q

generally used as secondary dressing but can also be used as a primary dressing

A

Vapour permeable films