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Chronic Wounds : Mnemonic Approach

Chronic wounds are wounds that have failed to proceed through an orderly and timely reparative process to produce anatomic and functional integrity over a period of 3 months.

Factors that Adversely Affect Wound Healing

Mnemonic: DIDN’T HEAL

  1. Diabetes (Diminished sensation, peripheral perfusion and impaired polymorphonuclear phagocytosis)
  2. Infection
  3. Drugs (Steroids and antimetabolites)
  4. Nutritional problems (Protein calorie malnutrition, deficiencies of Vitamin A, C and Zn)
  5. Tissue necrosis
  6. Hypoxia
  7. Excessive tension on wound edges
  8. Another wound (Competition between several healing areas for the substrates required for wound healing)
  9. Low temperature (Slower healing at distal part of extremities)

Diagnosis of Increased Bacterial Burden in Chronic Wounds

Signs suggestive of Superficial Infection (Can be treated topically):

Mnemonic: NERDS

  1. Non-healing
  2. Exudated
  3. Red friable tissue
  4. Debris (discoloration)
  5. Smell

Finding 3 clinical signs increased the specificity to 80.5% and sensitivity to 73.3%.

Signs suggestive of need for systemic antibiotics:

Mnemonic: STONEES

  1. Size increasing
  2. Temperature elevation
  3. Os (probes to bone)
  4. New breakdown
  5. Edema/Erythema
  6. Exudate
  7. Smell

Finding 3 clinical signs increased the specificity to 69.4% and sensitivity to 90%.

Wound Bed Preparation

Wound bed preparation is the management of a wound in order to accelerate endogenous healing or to facilitate the effectiveness of other therapeutic measures.

Mnemonic: TIMES

a. Tissue management

b. Infection and inflammation control

Sterilized honey can be used in chronic wounds. The antibacterial property can be attributed to following mechanisms:

  1. It creates hyperosmotic wound environment
  2. It produces hydrogen peroxide on dilution with wound fluid

Honey has been found to be a superior wound dressing agent compared to EUSOL (Edinburgh University Solution) in infected wounds. EUSOL is made with 1.25 gm boric acid, 1.25 gm bleaching powder and sterile water upto 100 ml. It has acidic pH and is useful in wounds infected with pseudomonas. It released nascent chlorine and becomes useless after 24 hours.

c. Moisture balance

d. Epithelial edge advancement

e. Skin around wound

Principles of Palliative Wound Care

Mnemonic: SPECIAL

  1. Stabilize the wound
  2. Prevent new wounds
  3. Eliminate Odor
  4. Control pain
  5. Infection prevention
  6. Absorb exudates
  7. Less Dressing Changes

Odor management in Chronic wounds

Most significant odor causing anaerobes include Bacteroides fragilis, Bacteroides prevotella, fusobacterium nucleatum, Clostridium perfringens, and anaerobic cocci. Other pathogenic organisms belong to the aerobic group of bacteria, the most common being Proteus, Pseudomonas, and Klebsiella.

The deodorizing effect of topical and oral administration of metronidazole has been shown to correlate with eradication of anaerobic infection, and its use on malodorous wounds has been well-documented.

For wound odor caused by aerobic bacteria, triple antibiotic ointment (polymyxin B, bacitracin zinc, and neomycin) is effective if used frequently and abundantly.

References:

  1. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery By Courtney M. Townsend, R. Daniel Beauchamp, B. Mark Evers, Kenneth L. Mattox
  2. https://www.woundscanada.ca/docman/public/wound-care-canada-magazine/2008-vol-6-no-2/323-wcc-2008-v6n2-free-papers/file
  3. https://www.woundsinternational.com/uploads/resources/content_9029.pdf
  4. Alvarez, O. M., Kalinski, C., Nusbaum, J., Hernandez, L., Pappous, E., Kyriannis, C., … Comfort, C. P. (2007). Incorporating Wound Healing Strategies to Improve Palliation (Symptom Management) in Patients with Chronic Wounds. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 10(5), 1161–1189. doi:10.1089/jpm.2007.9909
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