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Wound Healing

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Wound Healing Susie Pease Return to Practice (Nursing) School of Healthcare Studies The University of Leeds Stages of healing A complicated process all stages ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wound Healing


1
Wound Healing
  • Susie Pease
  • Return to Practice (Nursing)
  • School of Healthcare Studies
  • The University of Leeds

2
Stages of healing
  • A complicated process all stages overlap
  • Haemostasis commences immediately
  • Inflammation 0 - 4 days
  • Proliferation 4 - 24 days
  • Maturation 24 days - 1 year

3
Haemostasis
  • Blood leaks from a vessel into the tissues
    (extravasion of blood)
  • This initiates vasoconstriction
  • Platelet activation leads to coagulation
    (platelet plug)
  • Physiological factors cause formation of a fibrin
    clot (to reinforce platelet plug)

4
Haemostasis
platelets
Aggregation of platelets
Activation of clotting cascade

Formation of fibrin
Clot forms
5
Inflammatory Phase
  • Chemical mediators including histamine and
    serotonin attract leucocytes to area
  • Release of prostaglandins causes vasodilatation
  • Vasodilatation leads to increase in capillary
    permeability and inflammatory exudate
  • Neutrophils and monocytes (which change to
    macrophages) attracted to area
  • Neutrophils rid wound of contaminating bacteria
  • Macrophages phagocytose pathogenic organisms
    scavenge tissue debris including old neutrophils

6
Stage 2 phagocytic vacuole formation
Neutrophil
7
Inflammatory Phase continued
  • Oxygen and nutrients are required
  • New blood vessels are formed (angiogenesis)
  • Growth factors stimulate capillary endothelium to
    divide and direct the growth of new blood vessels

8
Angiogenesiscapillary buds grow towards wound
Dermis
Epidermis
Capillary bud
Capillary
Adipose tissue
9
Proliferative Phase
  • As capillary loops are formed the area becomes
    oxygenated
  • Macrophages and fibronectin stimulate fibroblasts
    to produce collagen, proteoglycans and elastin
  • With proteoglycans, a glue like substance,
    collagen fills tissue space
  • Elastin fibres give tissue its elasticity

10
Proliferative Phase cont.
  • Angiogenesis provides oxygen and nutrients
  • Vitamin C is essential for collagen formation
  • Without Vitamin C there is inadequate cross
    linking of collagen fibres and a reduction in
    strength
  • Iron, zinc, copper,vitamin A and protein are also
    essential elements in the wound healing process

11
Epithelialisation Contraction
  • During proliferation two other processes occur
    simultaneously
  • Wound contraction decreases size of wound
  • Epithelialisation resurfaces wound
  • Superficial skin loss - epithelialisation occurs
    from wound margins and hair follicles
  • More extensive skin loss - occurs from wound
    edges

12
Maturation Phase
  • Final stage starts about 3 weeks after injury
  • Involves remodeling of collagen fibres which
    continues to become stronger
  • Fibroblasts (collagen producing cells) migrate
    from wound
  • Rationalisation of numerous blood vessels
  • Scar shrinks, thins and pales

13
Healing by Primary Intention
  • Follows a clean surgical type incision
  • All phases of wound healing occur
  • Minimal formation of granulation tissue
  • Contraction has minor role
  • Epithelialisation occurs over suture line

14
Secondary Intention
  • Occurs where there is more extensive tissue loss
  • Large amounts of granulation tissue therefore
    longer process
  • Greater wound contraction required
  • Fibrous scar formation
  • Proliferative and maturation phases longer

15
Factors which delay healing
  • Intrinsic Factors
  • Age
  • Disease processes
  • Psychological status
  • Body image

16
Extrinsic Factors
  • Poor surgical technique or wound care
  • Malnutrition
  • protein / energy malnutrition
  • Vit A C, zinc, copper, iron - collagen
    synthesis
  • Dehydration
  • Drug therapies
  • Radiotherapy
  • Smoking

17
Signs of Normal Wound Healing
  • New wound red and raw
  • 2 - 3 days inflammation
  • Exudate depends on size of wound - lessens but
    some persists to complete epithelialisation
  • Granulation tissue - pale pink or yellowy bumpy
    cobblestone appearance
  • New epithelium - pale pink

18
Signs of delayed healing
  • Generalised malaise of patient
  • Pyrexia and tachycardia
  • Wound begins to discharge
  • Area around wound - red, sore, swollen, indurated
  • On removal of suture - pus discharged
  • Partial or complete wound breakdown on removal of
    sutures

19
Slough
  • yellow or white
  • dead, devitalised tissue, dry or moist
  • commonly lines base of chronic wounds

20
Necrotic Tissue
  • Black or blackish green
  • Dead tissue
  • Hard, leathery or soft and moist
  • Adherent to underlying tissue

21
Suggested Reading
  • Bale S., Harding K. Leaper D (2000) An
    Introduction to Wounds. Emap Healthcare.
  • Dealey C. (1999) The Care of Wounds. (2nd
    Edition) Blackwell Science.
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