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wound care introduction

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Here is part of an article from emedicine.com-it is listed in several parts.

I thought folks might be interested, so I am going to pass it along.

Wound Care

Wound Care Introduction

A wound is a break in the skin (the outer layer of skin is called the

epidermis). Wounds are usually caused by cuts or scrapes. Different kinds of

wounds may be treated differently from one another, depending upon how they

happened and how serious they are.

Healing is a response to the injury that sets into motion a sequence of

events. With the exception of bone, all tissues heal with some scarring. The

object of proper care is to minimize the possibility of infection and

scarring.

There are basically 4 phases to the healing process:

* Inflammatory phase: The inflammatory phase begins with the injury

itself. Here you have bleeding, immediate narrowing of the blood vessels,

clot formation, and release of various chemical substances into the wound

that will begin the healing process. Specialized cells clear the wound of

debris over the course of several days.

* Proliferative phase: Next is the proliferative phase in which a

matrix or latticework of cells forms. On this matrix, new skin cells and

blood vessels will form. It is the new small blood vessels (known as

capillaries) that give a healing wound its pink or purple-red appearance.

These new blood vessels will supply the rebuilding cells with oxygen and

nutrients to sustain the growth of the new cells and support the production

of proteins (primarily collagen). The collagen acts as the framework upon

which the new tissues build. Collagen is the dominant substance in the final

scar.

* Remodeling phase: This begins after 2-3 weeks. The framework

(collagen) becomes more organized making the tissue stronger. The blood

vessel density becomes less, and the wound begins to lose its pinkish color.

Over the course of 6 months, the area increases in strength, eventually

reaching 70% of the strength of uninjured skin.

* Epithelialization: This is the process of laying down new skin, or

epithelial, cells. The skin forms a protective barrier between the outer

environment and the body. Its primary purpose is to protect against

excessive water loss and bacteria. Reconstruction of this layer begins

within a few hours of the injury and is complete within 24-48 hours in a

clean, sutured (stitched) wound. Open wounds may take 7-10 days because the

inflammatory process is prolonged, which contributes to scarring. Scarring

occurs when the injury extends beyond the deep layer of the skin (into the

dermis).

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