Pressure Ulcers
Healing of wounds
Wet-to-dry dressings
Complications of healing
Staging Pressure Ulcers
100

Hardened black/brown tissue covering wounds.

 Eschar

100

What factors influence healing

Adequate nutrition & hydration, sensory perception, ability to change positions independently, age

100

A wound with necrotic tissue needs debriding, you would use what method

Wet-to-dry

100

An action by the nurse that is most appropriate when evisceration occurs

Cover the wound with saline soaked gauze and notify the surgeon immediately

100

 Full thickness loss with exposed muscle or bone.

Stage 4

200

Soft yellow/tan tissue made of dead cells in a wound bed

Slough

200

Which patient is at highest risk for delayed wound healing?

A 25 year old with a clean surgical incision

A 76 year old with diabetes and poor nutrition

A 58 year old with good perfusion at a healthy weight

A 7 year old with a small laceration

A 76 year old with diabetes and poor nutrition

200

This type of solution would be used for a wet-to-dry dressing

normal saline 

200

A patient who recently had abdominal surgery suddenly feels a pop after straining to cough. What would the nurse suspect happened and what interventions would they do?

Dehiscence, keep head of bed elevated slightly, provide binder if necessary, notify the provider immediately

200

Depth unknown due to slough/eschar.

Unstageable Ulcers

300

What does a low Braden scale score mean?

High risk for pressure ulcers

300

A burn wound heals by 

Secondary intention 

300

Packing the wound too tightly can lead to

tissue damage

300

The nurse is taking care of a patient and suspects an internal hemorrhage. Upon assessment what signs would the nurse expect to see

Decrease in BP, Increase in HR, swelling around area

300

Partial thickness loss or clear-fluid blister.

Stage 2

400

What steps must a nurse take with a suspected pressure injury?

Immediately remove pressure, inspect, palpate, CLEAN WOUND then stage, measure size and depth of wound, protect/cover wound, notify provider, document findings and interventions. Rotate patient every 2 hours to prevent further injury.

400

Which outcome would the nurse see that the wound has entered the proliferative phase of healing?

Bleeding and clot formation

Inflammation and redness

Development of granulation tissue

Scar maturation and remodeling

Development of granulation tissue

400

A dressing that is too saturated can lead to

maceration 

400

A nurse is assessing an 81 year old who recently had a hip surgery. She is unable to roll over in bed on her own, incontinent and has had little interest in eating. Which nursing diagnosis is appropriate based on these findings?

Risk for impaired skin integrity 

Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements 

Infection related to impaired skin integrity

Risk for impaired tissue integrity



Risk for impaired skin integrity 

400

Full thickness loss with visible fat.

Stage 3

500

Locations most at risk for developing pressure ulcer in bed bound individual?

Scapula, sacrum, trochanter, elbows, ankles, knees, and back of the head

500

This phase of wound healing is when the clotting mechanism occurs

Hemostasis 

500

You must do this before reapplying a dressing

reassess wound 

500

Upon assessment the nurse notices their patient's temperature is 101.2, purulent drainage, redness and heat coming from their incision site. What would the nurse suspect is happening

Infection

500

Intact skin with non-blanchable redness.

Stage 1