OTN Wound Care Rounds Mrs' Eugenia Hardacre SKIN TEARS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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OTN Wound Care Rounds Mrs' Eugenia Hardacre SKIN TEARS

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Identify contributing factors to development of skin tears; ... Look for clinical evidence. Goal should be to support normal skin functioning. Look for: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OTN Wound Care Rounds Mrs' Eugenia Hardacre SKIN TEARS


1
OTN Wound Care RoundsMrs. Eugenia HardacreSKIN
TEARS
  • Presented by
  • Rosemary Kohr, RN, PhD, APN
  • London Health Sciences Centre
  • November 18, 2008
  • rosemary.kohr_at_lhsc.on.ca

2
Focus of todays session
  • Identify contributing factors to development of
    skin tears
  • Identify prevention strategies re skin tears
  • Discuss team members to mobilize
  • Describe moist wound healing approach
  • Identify appropriate dressing choices for skin
    tears.

3
Things to take away with you
  • Evidence based practice
  • Causes of skin tears
  • Prevention strategies
  • Teamwork
  • Dressing options
  • Patient-centred care
  • Pain management

4
Meet Mrs.Eugenia Hardacre, your patient.
86 year old lady, lives in Long Term Care
setting, but has been admitted to hospital re
pneumonia and failure to thrive.
5
Skin tears happen
  • Moving from stretcher to bed
  • Tape
  • Wrist ID bands
  • IV sites (tape)
  • Catching on
  • bed-rails

6
More ways to tear skin
  • Removing dressings
  • Bedside table
  • Hitting shin on
  • walker

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9
Skin facts
  • Largest organ of the body
  • Weighs 20 body weight (6 pounds)
  • Expands 7 times during lifetime
  • Ranges from 3 -100 cells thick
  • Can self-regulate and regenerate

10
SKIN function
  • Protection from bacteria, chemicals, water and UV
    radiation
  • Insulation Heat Regulation
  • Touch sensation, communication
  • Synthesis Vitamin D
  • Wrap keeps everything from spilling out!

11
Skincomposition
  • Three attached layers
  • Epidermis keratinocytes.
  • Dermis vasculature, sweat glands
  • Hypodermis
  • subcutaneous layer.

12
Skin Layers
STRUCTURE OF THE SKIN
  • Epidermis
  • Dermis
  • Subcutaneous

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EPIDERMIS
  • Outermost protective skin layer
  • from 3 to 100 cells thick
  • Formed by the continuous upward migration of
    keratinocytes
  • Takes about I month to migrate to surface
  • Avascular layer (no blood supply)

15
Epidermis stratum corneum
  • Top layer of epidermis
  • Composed of keratinocytes, melanocytes and lipids
    (fats and oils)
  • Primarily responsible for protection
  • normal exfoliation on daily basis by
    mechanical/chemical trauma
  • Skin tears are an example of mechanical trauma

16
Acid Mantle
IMPORTANCE OF THE STRATUM CORNEUM
Keratin and lipids maintain moisture levels Acid
Mantle provides protection against bacterial
growth, keeps skin smooth. Skin stripping
removes the acid mantle
17
The Dermis
  • Contains endocrine glands (sweat ducts), hair
    follicles, blood vessels, lymphatics and nerves
  • Adipose tissue provides energy, insulation and
    pressure distribution
  • Vascularity provides heat exchange, nutritionand
    inflammatory response
  • The skin has been called the Third Kidney

18
ONE CUBIC CENTIMETER OF SKIN CONTAINS
One cubic centimetre of Skin
  • 10 hairs
  • 15 sebaceous glands
  • 3 yards of blood vessels
  • 4 yards of nerves
  • 100 sweat glands
  • 3,000 sensory cells
  • 300,000 epidermal cells

19
What happens to the skin as an individual ages?
  • Increased dryness
  • Easy bruising
  • Slower healing response
  • Wrinkles
  • Skin cancers precancers

Normal aging
Photoaging (ie. Sun damage)
20
Skin changes as we age
  • Functional Changes
  • Altered skin permeability
  • Decreased Inflammatory response
  • Decreased immunologic responsiveness
  • Decreased thermoregulation
  • Impaired wound healing
  • The Merck Manual of Geriatrics 1995

21
Skin changes as we age
  • Reduction in
  • Decreased Vitamin D synthesis
  • Impaired sensory perception
  • Decreased sweating and sebum production
  • Decreased elasticity
  • Thickness and attachments
  • The Merck Manual of Geriatrics 1995

22
Aging Skin
23
Incontinence and skin breakdown
  • Moisture and bacteria maceration.
  • Macerated skin requires less friction to cause
    damage
  • Urea in urine is turned into ammonia
  • This results in a high pH (alkaline)

24
Incontinence (continued)
  • Acid mantle is now alkaline and cannot function
  • If feces are present, digestive enzymes can be
    activated
  • The skin can no longer function as a barrier to
    bacteria.

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Dressing selection should be based on
  • Maintaining optimal temperature for healing
  • Decreasing trauma to the fragile granulating
    tissue of wound bed
  • Decreasing infection potential
  • Decreasing patient pain at dressing change
  • Cost effectiveness.

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SKIN SEALANT/BARRIER
  • designed for intact skin
  • easy to apply
  • dries quickly
  • inexpensive
  • prevents tape damage
  • Examples No Sting, Cavilon Cream, ProShield Plus

29
Managing Fragile Skin
  • FOR SKIN TEARS and FRAGILE SKIN
  • AVOID USING ADHESIVE DRESSINGS.
  • AVOID SOFRATULLE (adheres to wound bed)
  • CHOOSE MEPITEL, cover with gauze Kling.
  • (change Mepitel q 5-7 days, cover dressings--
    change as needed)

30
What about Adaptic, Jelonet, Opsite, etc.?
  • Watch for sensitizers such as Lanolin
  • Watch for barriers such as petrolatum and
    paraffin (impair the transfer of moisture to
    evaporate off wound)
  • Watch for adherence of transparent dressings
    tape tear the fragile skin on removal
  • Watch for maceration of periwound tissue from
    occlusive transparent dressings.

31
Dressings other options
Absorbent Acrylic Dressing
32
Cleansers, skin protectants
33
Skin Care ProductsWhat to choose?
  • Look for clinical evidence
  • Goal should be to support normal skin functioning
  • Look for
  • Sensitizers such as lanolin AVOID THEM!
  • PH of 4 -7
  • Ingredients that support skin functioning

34
Cleaning the skin
  • Avoid Bar soaps alkaline
  • Acid mantle is affected
  • skin dries out,
  • prone to infections
  • Avoid washcloths
  • often rough
  • Create friction injury
  • Use a body wash and a method to wash the skin
    that reduces friction.

35

Factors Affecting Skin
Soaps
  • Alkaline soaps reduce the thickness and number of
    cell layers in the stratum corneum
  • Normal flora washed away
  • Normal washing requires 45 minutes for skin to
    restore its acidic pH
  • Repeating washing requires 19 to 24 hours to
    restore the skins normal pH

36
Soaps look for pH between 4-7
Oil of Olay
DOVE
37
Avoid rough washcloths
38
Barriers Moisturizers
  • Purpose
  • Increases barrier function of skin
  • Ointment, cream, film
  • Petrolatum, zinc or dimethicone
  • Eg, NoSting
  • can affect function of continence products
  • Purpose
  • Maintain/support hydrated skin
  • Occlusive, Emollient or Humectant
  • prevent moisture loss, add moisture, or pull
    moisture from the environment

39
Occlusive, emollient or humectant
  • Dimethicone
  • emollient (hydrates) and occlusive
  • Adding more dimethicone ? occlusive
  • Not sensitizer
  • Uremol
  • Example of humectant (urea, lactic acid)
  • Pulls moisture from environment
  • Can burn if used over large area/large amount.
  • Petroleum jelly
  • occlusive (but its greasy)
  • Apply immediately after bathing

40
Moisture has to be just right!
  • Skin that is to wet is 5 times more likely to
    ulcerate than dry skin
  • Skin that is to dry is 2.5 more likely to
    ulcerate than normal skin

41

Skin Assessment
  • Asses skin turgor
  • Temperature/feel of skin warm dry to touch
  • History of nutrition, continence, hydration
  • Careful assessment (head to toe) of skin (not
    just the obvious places!)
  • Skin folds, creases,
  • under breasts, abdominal pannus,
  • behind the ears
  • Lower legs, feet, between the toes
  • Perineal, perianal areas
  • joints and over bony prominences
  • Around casts, braces, orthotics or prosthetics
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