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Principles of Wound Healing
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Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Principles of Wound Healing

Page 2: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

WHAT IS A WOUND?

Page 3: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or trauma to

tissues.

Page 4: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Common chronic wounds of the skin and soft tissues

Arterial

Venous

Pressure

Diabetes

Collagen Vascular disease

Udder

Page 5: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Normal acute wounds caused by surgery or

trauma usually heal and close rapidly

A chronic non-healing wound has been defined as

a wound that fails to proceed through the orderly

and timely series of events required to produce a

durable structural, functional, and cosmetically

acceptable closure.

Normal acute wounds caused by surgery or

trauma usually heal and close rapidly

A chronic non-healing wound has been defined as

a wound that fails to proceed through the orderly

and timely series of events required to produce a

durable structural, functional, and cosmetically

acceptable closure.

Chronic Versus Acute WoundsChronic Versus Acute Wounds

Reference: Lazarus GS, Cooper DM, Knighton DR et al. Definitions and Guidelines for Assessment of Wounds and Evaluation of

Healing. Arch Dermatol. 1994;130:489-493.

Reference: Lazarus GS, Cooper DM, Knighton DR et al. Definitions and Guidelines for Assessment of Wounds and Evaluation of

Healing. Arch Dermatol. 1994;130:489-493.

Page 6: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Acute WoundsAcute Wounds

• Cells are viable, able to respond to

growth stimuli

• Sufficient growth factors are

released in the wound environment

• Cells proliferate and can migrate

and synthesize components of new

tissueReference: Monaco JL, Lawrence TL. Acute wound healing; an overview. Clinics in Plastic Surgery 30 (2003): 1-12. Reference: Monaco JL, Lawrence TL. Acute wound healing; an overview. Clinics in Plastic Surgery 30 (2003): 1-12.

Page 7: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Chronic WoundsChronic Wounds

• Growth factors may be deficient

• Increased Bacteria

• Decreased oxygen

• Cells are senescent, unable to respond to growth factors

• Cells may be slow to proliferate and migrate (< 0.5 mm/week wound closure rate)

References:

Stanley A, Osler T. Senescence and the healing rates of venous ulcers. J Vasc Surg 2001 Jun;33(6):1206-11

Mulder GD, Vande Berg JS. Cellular senescence and matrix metalloproteinase activity in chronic wounds. Journal of the

American Podiatirc Medical Association. Jan 2002 92(1):34-37.

References:

Stanley A, Osler T. Senescence and the healing rates of venous ulcers. J Vasc Surg 2001 Jun;33(6):1206-11

Mulder GD, Vande Berg JS. Cellular senescence and matrix metalloproteinase activity in chronic wounds. Journal of the

American Podiatirc Medical Association. Jan 2002 92(1):34-37.

Page 8: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Biological and Chemical Defects in Chronic Wounds

• Deficient growth factors• Diminished granulation tissue• Delayed epithelialization• Defective extracellular matrix formation• Excessive proteases (MMPs)

Reference: Nwomeh BC, Yager DR, Cohen,IKC. Physiology of the chronic wound. Clinics in Plastic Surgery July 1998 25(3):341-356.Reference: Nwomeh BC, Yager DR, Cohen,IKC. Physiology of the chronic wound. Clinics in Plastic Surgery July 1998 25(3):341-356.

Page 9: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Growth factor deficiencies found

in chronic wounds include:

Growth factor deficiencies found

in chronic wounds include:• Platelet Derived Growth Factor (PDGF)• Transforming Growth Factor Beta (TGFß)• Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF)• Insulin-like Growth Factor (IGF-1)• Keratinocyte Growth Factor (KGF)

Reference: Robson MC, Smith PD. Topical use of growth factors to enhance healing. In Cutaneous Wound Healing editor V.

Falanga Martin Dunitz, London 2001 pp379-398.

Reference: Robson MC, Smith PD. Topical use of growth factors to enhance healing. In Cutaneous Wound Healing editor V.

Falanga Martin Dunitz, London 2001 pp379-398.

Page 10: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Good Wound Care:

Clinical practices which support the normal healing process

Good Wound Care:

Clinical practices which support the normal healing process

Page 11: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Key Considerations – Good Wound Care

• Infection control

• Sharp Debridement

• Moist wound environment

• Off-loading/compression therapy

• Nutritional status

Page 12: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Sharp Debridement

Removes:• Devitalized tissues• Bacteria and

proteolytic enzymes• Senescent cells

Page 13: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Know the wound etiology!

Page 14: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Venous stasis etiology

Page 15: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Arterial etiology

Page 16: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Neuropathic (Diabetic) Etiology

Page 17: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Pressure etiology

Page 18: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Collagen vascular etiology

Page 19: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Hypercoagulopathy

Page 20: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Phases of Normal Wound Healing

• Hemostasis

• Inflammation

• Proliferation

• Remodeling

Page 21: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Hemostasis

• Immediate reaction of small vessels in the area of injury is vasoconstriction

• Release of platelet cytokines (growth factors)

Page 22: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Inflammatory Phase

• Usually lasts from time of injury through 3 days

• Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN’s) are the first white blood cells to enter the wound

• Peak in 24-48 hours

• Macrophages appear at 48-96 hours

Page 23: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Proliferative Phase

• Fibroblasts appear in the wound on day 3, peaking on day 7

• Granulation tissue forms consisting of fibroblasts, inflammatory cells and capillaries in an extracellular matrix of collagen, fibronectin and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs)

• Fibroblasts are attracted to the wound and stimulated to proliferate by cytokines (growth factors) produced by platelets, macrophages and lymphocytes

Page 24: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Proliferative Phase

• Fibroblasts lay down the extracelluar matrix (collagen)

• Endothelial cells migrate in response to angiogenic stimuli and form new capillaries

• Epithelial cells migrate and begin the process of reepithelialization

Page 25: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Remodeling Phase

• Usually starts from month 3 and can last up to a year or more

• Reorganization of collagen

• Increase in tensile strength

Page 26: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Why won’t this wound heal?

Page 27: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Why won’t this wound heal?

Page 28: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Why won’t this wound heal?

Page 29: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Factors Affecting Normal Wound Healing

• Poor arterial circulation

• Infection

• Venous hypertension

• Diabetes

• Steroid usage

• Continued pressure

• Poor nutrition

• Cytotoxic substances

• Malignancies

Page 30: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Factors Affecting Normal Wound Healing

• Foreign bodies

• Cigarette smoking

• Radiation

• Alcoholism

• Aging

•Compliance

Page 31: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Poor Arterial Circulation

• inadequate supply of oxygen and nutrients required for healing

• Hypoxia impairs neutrophil function

• decreases collagen synthesis and cross linking

• decrease in tensile strength

• increases susceptibility to infection

Page 32: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Infection

• 100,000 bacteria/gram of tissue or greater and the body cannot control without intervention

• Beta hemolytic Strep is an exception. Wound healing is affected no matter what the concentration

• Bacteria secrete proteases, hemolysins and inhibitors of leukocyte chemotaxis

Page 33: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Infection

Page 34: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Venous hypertension

• superficial venous insufficiency

• incompetent perforator vein with normal deep vein

• venous hypertension:capillary distention, leakage of fibrinogen from the blood to dermis. Prevents oxygen diffusion nutrient transport, chronic leg edema

• periwound inflammation

• compression is the cornerstone of treatment

• color duplex Doppler's are the gold standard for diagnosis

Page 35: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Venous Stasis

Page 36: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.
Page 37: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Diabetes

• Peripheral neuropathy with sensory impairment

• Motor neuropathy leading to foot deformity

• Autonomic neuropathy (decreased sweating and suppleness of the skin)

• Peripheral vascular disease (atherosclerosis)

• Immunodeficiency

• Poor glucose control

• Denial of the disease

• Charcot arthropathy

Page 38: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.
Page 39: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

CHARCOT ARTHROPATHY

Page 40: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Glucocorticoid Usage

• Prednisone use: Increased risk of infection

• Use of steroids can increase wound complications 2-5 times

• Suppression of inflammation

• Decreased wound strength

• Inhibition of wound contracture

• Delayed epithelialization

• Topical vitamin A enhance epithelialization

• Oral vitamin A can increase collagen deposition

Page 41: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Continued Pressure

• Pressure, friction, shear

•Tissue hypoxia

• Tissue death

• Inhibition of normal wound healing mechanism to proceed

• Muscle can degenerate with as little as 60 mm Hg

• Pressure over some bony prominences can reach 2600 mm Hg

Page 42: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Cytotoxic Substances

• Topical products such as hydrogen peroxide, vinegar, povidone-iodine (Betadine), Gentian Violet solution, Phisohex, Dakins solution.

• OK to use for a couple of days if your goal is to reduce bacterial count. SHOULD NOT be used on wounds once they are clean and in the healing phase.

Page 43: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.
Page 44: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Malignancies

• Wounds that do not fit the profile of a typical chronic wound or is not progressing in the time frame that one might expect

• Squamous cell carcinoma, basal cell carcinoma, sarcomas, malignant melanomas, leukemias

Page 45: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.
Page 46: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.
Page 47: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Foreign Bodies

• Nidus for infection: Hematomas, Dysvascularized bone, tendon, cartilage,

metal objects, glass, wood, thorns

Page 48: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Smoking

• Limits functional tissue perfusion

• Cutaneous vasoconstriction and decreased wound contraction as a direct effect of nicotine

Page 49: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Radiation

• Thinning of the epidermis

• Decrease in quantity of blood vessels

• Increase fibrosis in dermis

• Fibroblasts permanently damaged

• Irradiated site becomes relatively ischemic

• Radiation damaged skin is easily damaged

• Poor inflammatory response after injury

• Poor angiogenesis

Page 50: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Osteoradionecrosis

Page 51: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Alcoholism

• Chronic alcohol usage can cause slow cellular growth and slower collagen accumulation

Aging

• Affects every stage of healing

• Decrease in wound tensile strength, delayed epithelialization, more tissue breakdown than synthesis

Page 52: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

CalciphylaxisPyoderma gangrenosum

Be aware!

Page 53: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Compliance

Page 54: Principles of Wound Healing. WHAT IS A WOUND? Wound(woond): Break in the continuity of soft or hard parts of the body structures caused by violence or.

Current Wound Healing Concepts

• Determine the wound etiology

• Take wound biopsies

• Ensure adequate perfusion

• Treat infection (take tissue cultures not swab cultures)

• Remove pressure from the wound

• Aggressive frequent debridements

• Keep wounds moist

•Compression is the key to venous stasis ulcers