| Literature DB >> 33739948 |
R Gary Sibbald, James A Elliott, Reneeka Persaud-Jaimangal, Laurie Goodman, David G Armstrong, Catherine Harley, Sunita Coelho, Nancy Xi, Robyn Evans, Dieter O Mayer, Xiu Zhao, Jolene Heil, Bharat Kotru, Barbara Delmore, Kimberly LeBlanc, Elizabeth A Ayello, Hiske Smart, Gulnaz Tariq, Afsaneh Alavi, Ranjani Somayaji.
Abstract
GENERALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33739948 PMCID: PMC7982138 DOI: 10.1097/01.ASW.0000733724.87630.d6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Skin Wound Care ISSN: 1527-7941 Impact factor: 2.373
Figure 1.WOUND BED PREPARATION 2021 PARADIGM
©WoundPedia 2021.
WOUND BED PREPARATION 2021: 10 FINAL STATEMENTS
| No. | Statement | Substatements |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Treatment of the cause | A. Determine if there is sufficient blood supply to heal/adequate perfusion. |
| B. Identify the cause(s) as specifically as possible or make appropriate referrals | ||
| C. Review cofactors/comorbidities (systemic disease, previous surgery, nutrition, medications, fragile skin) that may delay or inhibit healing | ||
| 2 | Patient-centered concerns | A. Manage pain (diagnosis and treatment) |
| B. Evaluate activities of daily living, mobility/exercise, eating habits, psychological wellbeing (mental health), and support system (patient circle of care, access to care, and financial constraints) | ||
| C. Evaluate habits: smoking, alcohol, substance use, personal hygiene | ||
| D. Empower patients with education and support to increase treatment adherence (coherence) | ||
| 3 | Determine ability to heal (status may change) | A. Healable: adequate blood supply to heal and treated the cause |
| B. Maintenance: adequate blood supply to heal where the patient either cannot or will not adhere to the plan of care/healthcare system does not have appropriate resources | ||
| C. Nonhealable: inadequate blood supply and/or a cause that cannot be corrected (eg, terminal cancer, negative protein balance) | ||
| 4 | Local wound care: monitor wound history and clinical examination | A. Document wound(s): location, longest length × widest width at right angles, wound shape, wound bed, exudate, margin, undermining, tunneling, surrounding skin condition, and photoimaging when available |
| B. Cleansing: gently with water, saline, or low-toxicity antiseptic agents | ||
| C. Reassess and document wounds at appropriate, regular intervals | ||
| 5 | When appropriate, debride wounds with adequate pain control | A. Consider sharp surgical debridement (to bleeding tissue) for healable wounds and conservative surgical debridement for maintenance/nonhealable wounds |
| B. Evaluate the need for alternative debridement modalities: autolytic with dressings, enzymatic, mechanical, or biologic | ||
| 6 | Assess and treat wounds for infection/inflammation | A. Treat local infection (three or more NERDS criteria) with topical antimicrobials (silver, iodine, PHMB/chlorhexidine, methylene blue/crystal violet, surfactants) |
| B. Consider treating deep and surrounding infection (three or more STONEES criteria) with systemic antimicrobials | ||
| C. Evaluate and alleviate persistent inflammation including consideration of anti-inflammatory agents (topical dressings, systemic medication) | ||
| 7 | Moisture management | A. Healable, moisture balance, and autolytic debridement: alginates, hydrogels, hydrocolloids, acrylics, films |
| B. Moisture balance alone: super absorbents, foams, calcium alginates, hydrofibers, hydrocolloids, films, hydrogels | ||
| C. Nonhealable and maintenance wounds and moisture reduction: if antibacterial needed, low toxicity topical anesthetics: chlorhexidine/PHMB, iodine, acetic acid | ||
| D. Wound packing: saline wet (donate moisture) or dry (absorb moisture) but not antibacterial; PHMB gauze: antibacterial, nonrelease—above the wound (stays in the gauze) only not in the wound surface; povidone iodine or other antiseptic soaked gauze: antibacterial above and on wound surface | ||
| 8 | Evaluate the rate of healing | A healable wound should be at least 20% to 40% smaller by week 4 to heal by week 12 |
| 9 | Edge effect: use active therapies for stalled but healable wounds | A. Some active modalities have weak to mixed evidence and should be only used after interprofessional assessment of the patient and with regular reevaluations |
| B. Skin grafts have variable but positive evidence, and cellular and/or tissue-based products may or may not be cost effective at this time | ||
| 10 | Organizational support | A. Organizational support may include a culture conducive to interprofessional education and patient-centered care, standardized evidence-informed protocols, adequate staffing, and established quality improvement programs that may include audits, prevalence and incidence studies, patient navigation |
Abbreviations: NERDS, Nonhealing, Exudate increase, Red friable granulation, Debris or dead cells, and Smell; PHMB, polyhexamethylenebiguanide; STONEES, Size enlargement, Temperature increase of ≥3° F versus the opposite limb mirror image temperature, Os (bone exposed or direct probing), New areas of break down on the wound margin, Exudate increase, Erythema and/or Edema, and Smell.
VASCULAR ASSESSMENT METHODS
| Method | Indication for Healability[ |
|---|---|
| Palpable pulse—dorsalis pedis, posterior tibial | >80 mm Hg |
| Ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI) | >0.6 and <1.4 |
| Transcutaneous O2 tension | >30 mm Hg |
| Toe pressure | >30–55 mm Hg |
| Audible handheld Doppler | Triphasic or biphasic sound |
©WoundPedia 2021.
TREATMENT OF WOUND CAUSE BY TYPE
| Wound Type | Treatment |
|---|---|
| All wounds | Aim for optimal nutrition, moisture management, pain control |
| Venous ulcers | • Compression bandages for healing |
| • Stockings for healing and to prevent recurrence | |
| • High compression in absence of arterial disease (ankle-brachial pressure index [ABPI] >0.9 or audible multiphasic signal with handheld Doppler) | |
| • Modified compression with mixed venous/arterial disease (ABPI 0.6–0.9) | |
| Pressure injuries | • Redistribute pressure over bony prominences and areas under pressure |
| • Reduce shear forces | |
| • Optimize physical activity and mobility | |
| • Manage incontinence and moisture | |
| Diabetic foot ulcers | V = vascular: confirm adequate vascular supply |
| I = infection: control superficial critical colonization/deep and surrounding infection | |
| P = pressure: redistribute plantar/dorsal foot pressure (neuropathy) | |
| S = sharp: surgical serial debridement |
©WoundPedia 2021.
Figure 2.COFACTORS AND COMORBIDITIES TO REVIEW FOR WOUND HEALING
©WoundPedia 2021.
MANAGEMENT OF WOUND-RELATED PAIN
| Simplified Pain Component | Therapeutic Action |
|---|---|
| Measurement tool | • Numeric Rating Scale, 0–10 (11-point scale; 0 = no pain, 5 = bee sting, 10 = slam the car door on your thumb; most people can live with a 3 or 4 out of 10) |
| • Faces scale: cognitively challenged, young children, older persons | |
| Neuropathic pain | • Burning, stinging, shooting, stabbing (see Supplemental Figure 1, |
| • Gabapentin/pregabulin, tricyclics, medical marijuana, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors | |
| Nociceptive pain | • Gnawing, aching, tender, throbbing |
| • Acetaminophen, aspirin, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, narcotics (short/long acting) | |
| Dressing removal | • Pull laterally to release adhesive bond and rotate like the hands of a clock before lifting up |
| • Avoid strong adhesives (acrylates, etc) and use silicone adhesives or nonadhesive dressings | |
| Wound cleansing (sterile only required with immune compromise, deep postsurgical wounds) | • Use saline or (potable) water solutions at room temperature |
| • Compresses or soaks are less traumatic than irrigation (make sure all solution is retrieved and you can visualize the base of the wound with no procedure-induced bleeding or unnecessary trauma) | |
| Debridement | • Topical eutectic mixture of local anesthetics is superior to other topical pain modalities |
| • Use a thick layer and occlude with film type dressing for 10–30 min (shorter period for genitalia, face, folds; longer times on back or thick skin) | |
| • Can supplement topical agents with intralesional xylocaine with adrenaline (if not end artery and no other contraindication) |
©WoundPedia 2021.
SUMMARY OF LOCAL WOUND CARE STRATEGIES
| Wound Healability Classification | Considerations | Surgical Debridement | Inflammation/Infection Management | Moisture Management |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healable | Provide moist environment | Active | Treat inflammation/infection (topically or systemic) | Moisture balance |
| Promote granulation | ||||
| Maintenance | Decrease moisture and bacteria | Conservative (no bleeding) | Bacterial reduction Topical antisepsis / systemic antimicrobial | Moisture reduction |
| Prevent deterioration | ||||
| Nonhealable | Decrease moisture and bacteria | Comfort removal of slough | Bacterial reduction Topical antisepsis / systemic antibiotics | Moisture reduction |
| Prevent infection | ||||
| Enhance comfort |
Adapted from Sibbald et al.[16]
©WoundPedia 2021.
WOUND ASSESSMENT
| Criterion | Details |
|---|---|
| Location | Identify using accepted medical terminology |
| Measurement (or alternate method head to toe, depending on facility policy) | Longest length in any direction (in cm) |
| Widest width at right angle to longest length (in cm) | |
| Total surface area by longest length × widest width (in cm2) | |
| Shape | Circular, oval, triangular, square, other |
| Undermining/tunneling | Measure and describe (in cm) |
| Describe the direction by clock (patient’s head is 12 o’clock) | |
| Wound base color | Percent of tissue; pink, yellow, black, or friable red |
| Exudate amount | None, scant, moderate, heavy |
| Margin | Normal, rolled/irregular/advancing edge, cribriform |
| Periwound skin | Normal, erythema, indurated, satellite lesions |
©WoundPedia 2021.
METHODS OF WOUND CLEANSING
| Method | Description | Purpose | Risks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Compress | Use sterile saline or potable water | Astringent action (coagulate protein) to remove surface debris from the wound bed surface | • Compresses can stick to the wound surface or there may be local pain from application or removal |
| No cavities/tunneling: gently pressing excess moisture from a moistened gauze/cloth applied to the wound, removed, repeated | • Faulty technique can introduce infection | ||
| For cavities/tunneling: moistened ribbon gauze may be applied similarly by gently packing into tunnel, removed and repeated | • Remember to leave external remnant of gauze packing above the wound to facilitate removal | ||
| Irrigation | Steady gentle flow of solution across wound surface when the base of wound is clearly visualized | Hydrate the wound | • Retained irrigation solution may collect in pocket if wound base is not visible |
| Remove deeper debris | • Trauma if pressure is too high | ||
| Assist with visual examination of wound base | • Splash back | ||
| • High pressure may drive bacteria into deeper compartments | |||
| Soaking | Immersion of wound in solution by applying an overhydrated gauze/cloth to the wound surface (no removal of excess moisture prior to application) | Hydrate the wound | • Disruption of moisture balance |
| Allow for physical removal of surface debris | • Maceration of surrounding skin | ||
| • Impaired healing with introduction or redistribution of bacteria from immersion fluid |
Adapted from Nicks et al.[18]
©WoundPedia 2021.
Figure 3.OPTIMIZING MOISTURE MANAGEMENT
Adapted from Sibbald et al.[16] ©WoundPedia 2021.
Figure 4.HOW TO CALCULATE WOUND SURFACE AREA
ADJUNCTIVE THERAPIES
| Recommendation | Therapy |
|---|---|
| Benefit in carefully selected patients | Skin grafts: split-thickness, full-thickness |
| Negative-pressure wound therapy | |
| Hyperbaric oxygen | |
| Uncertain evidence for routine clinical practice | Electrical stimulation |
| Ultrasound | |
| Neuromuscular stimulation | |
| Not recommended for clinical practice at this time | Light therapy (lasers and UV-C) |
| Topical oxygen |