Wound Care

There are many different types of wounds.

Those that require treatment have for whatever reason become problematic due to a break down in the healing process. Wounds such as leg ulcers, venous or arterial, diabetic foot ulcers, pressure sores, lymphatic skin conditions or injury sites that have become infected.

A vast majority can be accompanied, or a result of oedema. Oedema brings with it, bacteria, viruses and waste products that compounds the resistance to healing as well.

As mentioned on the Scar Tissue Therapy page, when an injury or wound occurs, the body goes through four stages of healing.

  1. Haemostasis – clot and stop the bleeding
  2. Inflammation / Immune response – clean up and remove waste & debris
  3. Proliferation – reconnect the damage fibers
  4. Remodeling – rebuild the structure

An interruption to this process is what causes a wound to become hard to heal or non-healing. 75-80% of the time, this occurs in stage 2, where the body is struggling with inflammation.

This is where Sal can help. First, she’ll take a medical history, account for any social, psychological and physical factors that may contribute to one’s capabilities, needs and wants, and of course assess the wound.

Wound healing is a complex and very fragile process. Failure to progress through the stages will likely lead to chronic and painful outcomes.

Evidence based wound care can speed up the stages of wound healing by keeping wounds moist, clean and protected from reinjury and infection.

Although the stages of wound healing are linear, wounds can move backward or forward depending on the patient, therapeutic, environmental and resource availability.

Risk of Infection

As mentioned on the Surgery Care page, open wounds, incisions or breaks in the skin is at risk of infection. It’s very important to keep the area clean, moist and protected from any friction or outside elements at least until the wound closes over. 

Signs of infection
  • Heat
  • Redness, watch for this expanding
  • Mucus / slough
  • Malodour
  • Excessive fluid leakage past the 7-10 days post surgery

Please see your surgeon immediately or get to emergency, if any of the above are present.

Risk of Cellulitis

Cellulitis is bacterial infection that affects the skin and tissue beneath it. It can develop anywhere on the body, but it’s most common on the lower legs and feet. Any sign of cellulitis, you must get yourself to emergency immediately, it can progress and become urgent very quickly.

Symptoms 

  • Redness, warmth, and swelling of the skin
  • Tenderness or pain in the affected area
  • Weeping or leaking of pus or clear fluid
  • Fever and chills
  • Blisters, spots, or dimpling of the skin
  • Swollen glands in the armpit or groin.

Causes 

  • A break in the skin, such as a cut, wound, scrape, insect bite, or animal bite
  • Skin conditions like eczema or fungal nail infections
  • Ulcers from diabetes or other diseases
  • Certain medications that suppress the immune system
  • A recent surgery wound 

Treatment 

  • Antibiotics are usually prescribed to treat cellulitis.
  • Early treatment can prevent the infection from spreading.
  • More serious cases may require hospitalisation.