Types & Manifestations of Inflammation
Healing Processes (Primary, Secondary, Tertiary)
Risk Factor or Complication of Wound Healing
Pressure Injury Stages
Management of Care
100

Healing that occurs over weeks to year

Provide an example

What is chronic inflammation?

Examples include: osteomyelitis or rheumatoid arthritis

100

This portion of healing deals with the edges of the incision are aligned and the acute inflammatory process begins. 

What is primary intention?

100

Nutritional deficiencies 



What is risk factor?

Examples: Vitamin C, Protein, Zinc

100

It has non-blanchable erythema of intact skin

Changes in sensation, temperature, or firmness, can precede visual changes

What is Stage 1?

100

How often do we perform repositioning on a patient?

What is every 2 hours?

Items we can use to help with support of repositioning includes low air-loss mattress, foam mattress, wheelchair cushions, padded commode seats, air/foam boots, and lift sheets.

200

Healing that occurs over 2-3 weeks


Provide an example

What is acute inflammation?

Examples include: allergic reaction, appendicitis, anaphylaxis

200

This stage of healing has wide, ireegular margins which contains more debris, cells and exudate. This is where a wound will need to be debrided.

Healing occurs from the edges in and from the bottom up

What is secondary intention?

200

Chronic infection

What is a complication? 


This leads to the body not being able to recover from the microbes

200

Full thickness skin loss

Subcutaneous and adipose tissue are visible
(no bone, tendon, or muscle)

Slough can be present

May have undermining

What is Stage 3?

200

Nutritional therapy for patients with wounds includes a diet high in

What is protein, carbohydrates, and moderate amount of fat?

300

Signs of local inflammation

Local inflammation includes: redness, heat, pain, swelling, and loss of function

300

This stage of healing occurs due to delayed suturing of the wound. The wound is either contaminated and left open or has to be reopened due to infection. It leaves a larger, deeper scar. 

What is tertiary intention?

300

Inadequate blood supply


What is risk factor?

This is due to decreasing nutrient supply.

300

Partial thickness loss of skin with exposed dermis

Shallow, moist, and open with a red-pink wound bed

Presents as either intact or ruptured serum filled or serosanguineous fluid blister

What is Stage 2?

300

Nurses inform patient to manage three important pieces about onself's while at home

What is rest, hydration, and nutrition?

Wound healing can take upwards to 4-6 weeks or longer

400

Signs of chronic inflammation

Chronic inflammation clinical manifestations include fatigue (malaise), nausea (anorexia), increased HR and RR, fever, and increased shift from WBC from shift to the left

400

Similar to primary, but with the gaping wound edges

What is secondary intention?

400

Cellulitis

What is complication?

This leads to a spreading of inflammation to the subcutaneous or connective tissue.

400

Full thickness loss with shown muscle, bone, tendon

These are exposed, palpable or involved

May have slough or eschar

Can have undermining or tunneling

What is Stage 4?

400

Patients with wounds need a diet high in which vitamins

Vitamins A, B complex and C


500

When do we become concerned with fever?

What is 103 degrees Fahrenheit?

But Why oh Why?

Fever causes our body to increase heat production and reaches a new point (think of like when you set your thermostat in the car or heater). The body becomes hot and then causes chills to raise the warmth to reach new point.

Fever kills microorganisms, increases the engulfing of bacteria by the neutrophils.

500

What healing process deals with the wound being reopened?

What is tertiary intention?

500

Death

What is a complication? 


This is due to severe sepsis that the body isn't able to recover.

500

Full thickness skin and tissue loss, extent is not able to be shown due to obscured by slough or eschar

Slough or eschar have to be removed to expose base of wound and determine depth

What is unstageable?

500

Nurses rotate a swab near the center of the wound using enough pressure to extract fluid from deep tissue layers of wound.

What is this describing?

What is a culture swab?

Remember: Don't provide necrotic tissue or exudate on the sample, because it doesn't provide an accurate sample.

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