Wounds
Pressure injury
Peripheral Arterial Disease
Chronic Venous insufficiency
Previous
100

What are the stages of wound healing 

Inflammatory - 1-5 days

Proliferative - 5-21 day 

Maturation and remodeling - 3-6 month 

100

What are the risk factors for pressure injuries 

advanced age, anemic, diabetic, more frickem going on, anemic, obese/ more frail (skinny), immobile, incontinent, vascular disease

100

What is the cause of PAD? 

Involves thickening of the artery walls and progressive narrowing of arteries of upper and lower extremities.

100

What are risk factors for chronic venous insufficiency? 

family history, women tend to have higher rates, smokers, aging, obesity, people who have had multiple pregnancy, history of certain leg injuries, prolonged sitting or standing.

100

Describe the different precautions

standard

contact

droplet

airborne 

200

How are the 3 different depths of wounds defined 

Superficial 

Partial thickness - 

Full thickness 

200

this is the best treatment for pressure injuries 

Prevention

200

This ischemic muscle pain is seen when a patient moves; and goes away when the patient rest 

Intermittent claudication. 

200

What are the 5 main manifestations of CVI? 

1. Edema: in the lower extremities; entire leg because fluid cannot get back up to the heart. 

2. Red, purplish, brown color to lower leg: might look leathery 

3. Dermatitis: inflammation of the skin; eczema or scaling of the skin. 

4. Varicose veins: back of the calves. 

5. Pain: in lower extremities 

  • Worsens when dependent (legs below heart): gets worse at the end of the day. 

  • Improves with elevation

200

what are some of the differences between OA and RA? 

OA: Wear and tear '' arthritis. When cartilage that cushions the ends of bone in your joints gradually deteriorates. Slowly progrssive NON-INFLAMMATORY disorder. RF: menopause/ genetics

RA: AUTOIMMUNE and inflammatory disease. Immune system attacks healthy cells in your body by mistake. Causes joint pain and stiffness, decreased movement.

300

What are the 3 different types of healing 

Primary: well approximated edges; surgical insicions

Secondary: Not well approximated; heals from the inside then to the surface; Heals slowly; (pressure injury) 

Tertiary: Delayed primary; we leave it open to heal then when the edges are approximated; we close it up. 

300

According to the Braden's scale; a patient who received a score of 11 is more; or less at risk for developing a pressure injury than someone who is at 23. 

They are more; the lower the number; the more at risk you are. 

300

Most common site of Arterial Ulcers? 

Tips of toes and pressure points. 

300

Where are Venous Ulcers typically found 

Medial Malleolus: this is the classic location, (inner ankles)

300

Dry Cough, pain in chest, coughing up blood (late), wt loss, no appetite, chills, sweating at night. Prevent with screenings - these are s/sx of what disease? 

TB

400

Separation of one or more layers of the wound bed; typically happens 5-8 days post op

Dehiscence; this is similar to evisceration except with evisceration we have total separation of the wound and evisceration also may affect internal organs  

400

What is the difference between unstageable and deep tissue injury? 

unstageable is due to an obscured wound bed; either from slough or eschar

Whereas;

Deep tissue injury is a purple/maroon blood filled blister 

400

Describe what these wounds look like? 

Pale, well-defined edges, minimal exudate; may have eschar/more necrotic tissue. 

400

How would you describe a venous ulcer? 

Irregular shape, shallow, high exudate, 

Wound bed -->Yellow slough, Ruddy granulation tissue, Maceration on wound bed edges 

400

Match these: LDL, HDL, Fasting TRI, Cholesterol 

> 200

<40

>150

>130

Bad levels: Cholesterol > 200, HDL < 40, LDL >130, fasting tri >150

500

Name as many factors that affect wound healing as possible 


(hint: there is 11 of them!) 

Nutrition, inadequate blood supply, corticosteroids, infection, anemia, smoking, mechanical friction, advanced age, obesity, smoking, poor general health. 

500

Describe the four stages of pressure injuries 

Stage 1: intact skin, redness, nonblanchable 

Stage 2: partial thickness dermis loss

Stage 3: full thickness loss, subQ may be visible 

Stage 4: full thickness loss, reaching muscle tendons and organs. 

500

What are going to be interventions for PAD? 


(hint: how does CVD, DM, Exercise, and positioning affect PAD) 

Health promotion: (Preventing CVD, stop smoking, foot care, diet modifications), keeping A1C below 7, avoid leg elevation, exercise 30-45 min/3x/week, monitor for infection, keep eschar intact, pain (looser fitting cloths) 
500

What is the #1 treatment for CVI? 

Compression. 

500

What are HgB ranges for men and women ?

Men 14-18

Women 12-16