Wound Management
SA Bandaging
SA Wound Case Studies
Bandaging and Wound Management LA
LA Wound Case Study
100

When is a wound classified as infected rather than contaminated?

When bacterial numbers exceed 10^5 CFU per gram of tissue.

100

What are the goals of bandage?

protects wound and speeds wound healing

100

What are the most commonly used needles in vet med?

3/8 and 1/2 circle needle

100

What are the guidelines for equine patients with wounds that have not had a tetanus vaccine?

give tetanus toxoid and anti-toxin

100

When closing large body wounds what is the number 1 complication that should be discussed with owners?

dehiscence

200

What type of healing is indicated when a wound is closed after granulation tissue has already formed in the wound bed?

Secondary Closure

third intention healing


200

What are the three basic layers of a modified Robert Jones bandage and the functions of each layer.

Primary layer: debrides, delivers meds, transfers wound exudate, forms occlusive seal, minimizes pain, prevents excessive loss of body fluids

Secondary Layer: absorbs and sequesters deleterious agents, retards bacterial growth, pads wound from trauma, splints wound to prevent movement, holds primary bandage layer in place

tertiary layer: holds other layers in place, protects against external bacterial colonization, cosmesis


200

What could you replace the three square knots with at the end of your simple continuous pattern?

aberdeen knot

200

What are the complications associated with wound healing in large animals?

dehiscence

proud flesh

involvement of synovial structures

bone sequestrum

cellulitis

200

What type of needle would you use to close a muscle layer of a large body wound?

taper point

300

What are the wound healing characteristics of abrasions?

Heal rapidly be reepithelialization

300

What does the use of more padding in a cast accomplish?

less well immobilized

300

What is the mechanism of absorption of suture: organic, synthetic, and nonabsorbable?

Organic: gradually digested by tissue enzymes and phagocytized

Synthetic: hydrolysis

Non-absorbable: ultimately encapsulated or walled off by fibrous tissue

300

What are the guidelines to applying an equine bandage?

even tension, appropriate tension, cover required areas

300

When suturing a wound on a leg, how do you prepare the site and why?

sterile gloves should be worn, a drape should be applied distal to the limb in case you drop your suture

400

A patient presents with a mildly contaminated open wound that the owner noticed just now but thinks happened about 8 hours ago when she had him outside on a stake unsupervised. What would you classify this wound as and how would you treat it?

Class 2

6-12 hours old

microbial levels may have reached critical levels consistent with development of infection

Treat by delayed primary closure.

appositional closure within 3-5 days
400

What factors go into deciding to use a cast in the treatment of a fracture?

-stable minimally displaced fractures

-young rapidly healing animals-only injuries distal to the elbow/stifle

-unable to repair with surgical techniques

400

List the major considerations for suture selection and summarize the classification of suture.

  • Length of time the suture will be required to help strengthen the wound
  • Risk of infection
  • Effect of the suture material on wound healing
  • Dimension and strength of the suture required
  • Classified by their structure, behavior in tissue, and origin.
400

You are in your clinical rotations and an equine patient presents with a wound around its knee, what should you do to assess the severity of the wound?

pressurize the structure to determine if there is synovial involvement. If there is, the prognosis is worse.

400

What causes dehiscence of a wound?

-fluid accumulation

-infection

-inflammation

500

You are in your fourth year rotations and a patient presents with a dirty wound that your preceptor classifies as a Class 3 Wound. Your preceptor asks you to go get irrigation solution. What materials are you grabbing? Would you add any antiseptic to the solution? How would

Sterile isotonic saline or a balanced electrolyte solution (LRS)

Probably would not add antiseptic.

1 liter bag of fluid within a cuff pressurized to 300mmHg

antiseptics have little effect on bacteria in established infections and may damage tissue

500

Your patient presents with a wound in on the most proximal aspect of its hip, explain the steps you would take to apply a bandage.

  • Apply several sutures or skin staples with loose loops around periphery of wound
  • Apply primary and secondary bandage layers
  • Hold tertiary layer by lacing umbilical tape or heavy suture through loose skin sutures or staples
500

Walk me through the closure of an abdominal procedure such as an OVH and what types of suture/pattern you would use for each layer.

Linea alba: sutures placed in external rectus sheath, simple continuous pattern or interrupted, slowly absorbable, monofilament suture with a cutting/reverse cutting needle (

subcutaneous: simple continuous, monofilament suture, absorbable, taper needle

subcuticular: monofilament suture, absorbable, cutting/reverse cutting needle

skin:monofilament, nonabsorbable, cutting/reverse cutting needle

500

An equine patient presents to you with a deep wound on the fetlock that has a viscous exudate coming out of it. What wound dressing would you use when bandaging this wound?

gauze: wet to dry, 4x4, or kerlix AMD

wet gauze with saline and place next to the wound under a bandage

500

Your patient presents with a heel bulb laceration that does not seem to have any granulation tissue but is slightly contaminated and does not exceed past the distal interphalangeal joint. Walk me through the treatment for this horse.

delayed primary closure with a wet to dry bandage and close the wound in 1-2 days 

abaxial nerve block 

foot cast- stall rest, change elasticon at the top every 1-2 days and remove in 2-3 weeks

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