Transcript Chapter 26
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Chapter 26
Wound Care
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Terminology Related to
Wound Healing
Dehiscence: separation of outer wound layers
Evisceration: rupturing of a wound
Eschar: hard, dry, leathery dead tissue
Granulation tissue: new tissue growing on a
wound
Sinus tract: tunnel developing between two
cavities in a wound
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Classification of Wounds
Contusions—closed discolored wound
caused by blunt trauma—bruise
Skin intact—injury beneath epidermis
Blood leaks from broken blood vessels
Extra fluid in interstitial space—pressure on
nerve endings—pain or tenderness
Blood—skin discoloration
Ecchymotic area----ecchymosis
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Surgical Incisions
Sharply defined edges
Under sterile conditions
Well approximated—close together—touching
Incision closed with sutures, staples, steristrips, or skin adhesive
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Classification of Wounds
Abrasions—superficial open wound
Scrapes or rub-type wound
Superficial
Heal well when kept clean
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Classifications of Wounds
Puncture wounds—open wound when a sharp
item pierces the skin
Round hole that penetrates into deeper tissue
Dependent on the length and diameter of the
sharp item
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Classifications of Wounds
Penetrating wounds—similar to a puncture
wound
Object remains embedded in tissue
Degree of damage depends upon size of the
object and the tissues or organs affected by the
penetration
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Classification of Wounds
Lacerations—open wound made by accidental
cutting or tearing of tissue
Common—knives, pieces of glass and metal
Jagged edges
Closure more difficult and less anesthetically
pleasing than a surgical incision
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Classifications of Wounds
Pressure Ulcers—wound resulting from
pressure and friction
Skin may be intact and erythemic or skin may be
broken
May be superficial or very deep
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Multiple Choice Question
A nurse is caring for a patient in the ER who
cut his hand with a kitchen knife and needs
stitches. The nurse documents this wound as
A. Contusion
B. Laceration
C. Puncture wound
D. Penetrating wound
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Pressure Ulcers
Aka decubitus ulcer or bedsore
Occurs when external pressure is exerted on
soft tissue—esp. over bony prominences
For a prolonged period of time
Tissues and capillaries compressed—reduced
blood flow—ischemia
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Pressure Ulcers
Direct result of friction or shearing force
Bony prominences—sacrum, buttocks, greater
trochanters, elbows, heels, ankles, occiput,
and scapulae
Longer the pressure is maintained—the worse
the extent of necrosis
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Risk Factors for
Pressure Ulcer Development
Being elderly
Being emaciated or malnourished
Being incontinent of bowel or bladder
Being immobile
Having impaired circulation or chronic
metabolic conditions
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stage of Pressure Ulcers
Deep tissue injury: area over a bony prominence that
differs from surrounding tissue; may be blister-like or
a discoloration
Stage I: erythema
Stage II: partial-thickness loss of dermis
Stage III: full-thickness loss; damage to epidermis, dermis,
and subcutaneous tissue
Stage IV: full-thickness loss; damage to deep tissue,
muscle, fascia, tendon, joint capsule, and/or bone
Unstageable: eschar covers the wound, making it
impossible to tell the depth
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stage of Pressure Ulcers
Deep tissue injury
Area over a bony prominence that differs from
surrounding tissue
Temperature, firmness, or discomfort
May be blister-like or a discoloration
Dark burgundy, purple, or maroon color, like a bruise
Represent injury to the underlying soft tissue
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stage of Pressure Ulcers
Stage I
Erythema—generally over a bony prominence
Remains for at least 15 to 30 minutes after
relieving the pressure—will not blanch
Dark skinned individual—darker than normal
May feel warm, firm, soft, or boggy, pain, tingling
Do not massage area
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stages of Pressure Ulcers
Stage II
Partial thickness loss
Intact serum filled blister or shallow, pink or red
ulceration can be either shiny or dry
Usually erythema surrounding
Possible infection
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stages of Pressure Ulcers
Stage III
Full-thickness skin loss
May go to subcutaneous tissue—not involving
muscle or bone
May have undermining or tunneling
Slough may be present
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stages of Pressure Ulcers
Stage IV
Full-thickness skin loss
Involves muscle, fascia, tendon, joint capsule, and
sometimes bone
May have tunneling or undermining
Infection—possible osteomyelitis
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stages of Pressure Ulcers
Unstageable
Involve full-thickness tissue loss but impossible to
accurately stage due to inability to view wound
base—eschar or excessive slough
Eschar—hard, dry, dead tissue—leathery
appearance—can be black, brown, or tan
Cannot stage until base of wound is viewed
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stages of Pressure Ulcers
Unstageable
If eschar remains intact and stable
Completely covering heel
Do not remove it
Nature’s band-aid
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Prevention
Braden scale
Predicts pressure sore risk
Six categories—sensory perception, moisture,
activity, mobility, nutrition, and friction and shear
Figure 26-4, pg. 562
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Prevention
MAJORITY of pressure ulcers can be prevented
Good nursing care
Thorough skin assessment—esp. high risk areas
How often?
Dry, flaky, peeling—non-intact skin—excoriated—
blistered—color—temperature…….
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Prevention
Good nursing care
Skin turgor—will tell you?
Edema?
Reposition q 2h
Keep skin clean and dry
Keep linens free of wrinkles
Lotion to dry skin
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Prevention
Good nursing care
Use lift sheet or mechanical lift
Do not pull anything out from under patient—roll
patient—then remove
Adequate fluids and nutrition
Supplements?
Specialty beds and pressure relieving devices
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Stasis Ulcer
Develop when venous blood flow is sluggish
Usually in lower extremities
Blood pools in veins
Resulting edema damages surrounding tissue
Ulcers develop
Chronic condition and difficult to heal
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Venous Ulcer
Pretibial area of lower leg or above the medial
ankle
Usually large
Shallow with diffused edges
Exudation/granulating
Generalized edema
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Venous Ulcer
Staining
Ankle-brachial index—greater than 0.8
Normal pulses
Some dependent pain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Venous Ulcer Treatment
Conservative management
Compression treatment
Elevate legs
Surgery in selected patients to re-establish
valve function and resolve venous
hypertension
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Arterial Ulcer
Distal portion of the lower extremity, over
ankle or bony areas of foot (top of the foot or
toe, outside edge of the foot)
Usually small
Deep with “cliff”edges
Dry (necrotic)
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Arterial Ulcer
Localized edema
Never staining
Ankle-brachial index—less than 0.8
Reduced or absent pulses
Pain present especially at night (elevated)
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Arterial Ulcer Treatment
Re-establish arterial supply by surgical or
pharmaceutical intervention
Do not use compression therapy
Protect the wound and surrounding skin from
trauma until arterial supply is re-established
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Diabetic Ulcer
On the foot—at mid-foot, ball of the foot, over
the metatarsal heads, or on the top of toes
with Charcot deformity
Often very small
Deep with “cliff” edges
Dry (necrotic)
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Diabetic Ulcer
Localized edema
Never staining
Ankle-brachial index—not reliable
Pulses—not reliable
No pain--neuropathy
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Diabetic Ulcer Treatment
Redistribute pressure below the ankle through
orthotics
Aggressive debridement to reduce the very
high incidence of infection experienced in
diabetic ulcers
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Three Phases of Wound Healing
Inflammatory
Occurs when the wound is fresh; includes both
hemostasis and phagocytosis
Reconstruction (proliferation)
Occurs when the wound begins to heal, about 21
days after injury
Maturation (remodeling)
Occurs when the wound contracts and the scar
strengthens
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Types of Wound Closures for Healing
First intention
Wound is clean with little tissue loss, edges are
approximated, and wound is sutured closed
Second intention
There is greater tissue loss, wound edges are
irregular, and wound is left open
Third intention
Wound is left open for some time to form
granulation tissue and then sutured closed
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Factors Affecting Wound Healing
Age
Chronic illness
Diabetes mellitus
Hypoxemia
Lifestyle choices
Lymphedema
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Factors Affecting Wound Healing
(cont.)
Medications
Multiple wounds
Nutrition and hydration
Radiation exposure
Wound tension
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Complications of Wound Healing
Complications can occur as wound heals
Differentiate between normal healing and the
presence of complications
Assess wounds every shift
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Assessment Parameters
for Wound Healing
Site
Wound type
Wound closure
Drainage—color, amount, odor?
Condition of wound bed—measure—
tunelling or undermining
Condition of skin surrounding wound
Pain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Normal Findings
Surgical Incision
Skin edges well approximated
Staples or sutures intact
Serosanginous drainage
No odor
Surrounding skin fleshtone (peri-wound area)
Pain decreasing as days pass
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Assessment
Surgical Incision
Incisional site
Sutures or staples
Drainage—odor
Peri-wound
Pain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Abnormal Findings
Surgical incision
Dehiscence or evisceration
Sutures or staples not intact
Surrounding skin
Color (pink, red, ecchymotic), edema, ↑temperature
Drainage (sanginous, purulent)
Odor
Increased pain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Wound Closure
Sutures or staples
Absorbable sutures on inner layers
Well approximated
Removed approximately 7 to 14 days
Steri-strips—gives support to incision
Do not remove—Do not soak
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Nursing Care for Sutures/Staples
Assessment of sutures every 8 hours
Note loosening, gaps, redness
May be responsible for removing
suture/staples when wound is healed
Skill 26-1, pg. 578
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Wound Drainage
Sanguineous—red, bloody
Serous—clear to pale yellow
Serosanguineous—blood and serous fluid—
light red to pink
Purulent—thick drainage—various colors
Bilious—dark greenish—often after
galllbladder surgery
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Normal Findings
Open Wound
Wound base (granulation tissue)
Skin edges straight
No undermining or tunneling
Surrounding skin fleshtone
Pain decreasing
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Assessment
Open Wound
Wound base
Skin edges
Undermining or tunneling?
Drainage—odor?
Peri-wound
Measurement
Pain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Abnormal Findings
Open Wound
Wound base: Infection, necrotic tissue, slough, no
granulation tissue
Skin edges curled
Undermining or tunneling
Surrounding skin: red, ecchymotic, warmer or
cooler to touch, edema
Increased pain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Signs of Wound Infection
Redness or increased warmth
Swelling
Wound drainage
Unpleasant smell
Pain around wound
Fever above 100°F
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Obtaining a Wound Culture
C&S of wound
Determine effective antibiotic treatment
If irrigation also ordered—perform irrigation
first
Skill 26-4, pg. 582
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Nursing Care
Monitor vital signs
Monitor laboratory test results
Monitor pain level
Description of wound and S/S
Notify physician—have all your ducks in a row
What information will you need?
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Patient Teaching
Signs and symptoms of wound infection
Notify physician if any occur
Proper use of antibiotics
Dressing change—involve family members—
demonstrate—have them return
demonstration
Instructions verbally and in writing
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Cleansing an Incision
When ordered
Superior end of incision to inferior end
Drainage usually flows downward
Long strokes—new swab for each stroke
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Cleaning a Wound
Dissolved necrotic tissue or pus
Tissue fluid and blood
Cleansing methods
Whirlpool
Irrigation
Gauze moistened with sterile saline
Careful not to damage healthy granulation tissue
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Irrigation
Nursing care
Remove surface debris without injuring tissue
Varying degrees of pressure
Wear appropriate PPE
Position patient correctly
Collection container
Most common irrigant—Sterile normal saline
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Types of Drainage Tubes
Hemovac: active drain uses suction
Jackson-Pratt: active drain uses suction
T-tube: passive drain uses gravity
Penrose: open drain; not commonly used
because can provide pathway for pathogens
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Drainage Tubes
Nursing care
Empty q 8h or when ½ to 2/3 full
No compression—no suction
Measure drainage—I&O—individual containers
Note type, amount, odor
Careful dressing change with penrose drain
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Cleaning a Drain Site
When ordered
Circular motion
Innermost aspect to outer aspect
Each motion—one swab—then disposed
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Purposes of Dressing
Protect the incision
Absorb drainage as the wound heals
Protect the wound from further injury
Provide moist environment for healing
Fill the open space within the wound
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Types of Dressings
Alginate
Gauze
Hydrocolloid
Hydrofiber
Negative pressure wound therapy
Polyvinyl
Table 26-2, pg. 573
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Wet-to-Damp/Wet-to-Dry
Maintain moist wound bed
Wick out drainage from wound
Changed frequently to prevent total drying
out of gauze
Debridement
Wet-to-Damp are favored—they preserve
granulation tissue
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Securing Dressing
Tape
Silk
Paper—thin, fragile skin or allergic
Foam--thicker
Tape superior and inferior edges of dressing
Working laterally
Extend beyond dressing 1 ½ to 2 inches
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Securing Dressings
Dressing over joint
Place tape parallel to the bend of the joint
Allows movement without dislodging dressing
Montgomery Straps
Frequently changed dressings
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Securing Dressings
Abdominal binders
Abdominal dressings
Provide support to incision
Ace wrap or gauze
Secures dressing without the use of tape
Elastic netting
Secures dressing without the use of tape
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Bandage Turns
Circular
Beginning and end of application
Spiral
Overlap each turn by 50%
Provides equal compression
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Bandage Turns
Figure eight
Over joint
Recurrent
Head or stump
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Applying Bandage on Extremity
Elevate extremity
Hold roll of bandage in dominant hand
Roll on top
Always move distal to proximal
Never stretch bandage
Apply with even pressure—not tight—two
fingers
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis
Fundamentals of Nursing Care: Concepts, Connections, & Skills
Nursing Responsibilities for
Applying Dressings
Open wound = sterile procedure
Clean versus sterile technique
Handwashing
Gloves should always be worn
Additional PPE if excessive drainage, isolation,
splashing….
Copyright © 2011 F.A. Davis