Title: Wound Management
1Wound Management
- October 11, 2001
- Gavin Greenfield and Bob Johnston
2Objectives
- Wound Healing
- Wound Evaluation History, Physical examination
- Wound Preparation
- Wound Closure
- Specific Wounds
- face, scalp, eyebrow, eyelid, ear, lips,
intraoral, puncture, fingertip and nail, foreign
bodies, bites
3Wound Healing
- the primary goal of wound care is not the
technical repair of the wound it is providing
optimal conditions for the natural reparative
processes of the wound to proceed - Richard L. Lammers (Roberts and Hedges)
4Skin Anatomy
- Epidermis
- keratinized squamous epithelium
- avascular
- Dermis
- dense, fibro-elastic tissue
- highly vascular
- cells of dermis mainly fibroblasts responsible
for elaboration of collagen, elastin, ground
substance - Subcutaneous layer (superficial fascia)
- connects dermis to underlying tissue
- contains variable amounts of adipose tissue
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6Case 1
- 1st year medical student comes in with laceration
to hand. You evaluate the wound and feel it is
appropriate for primary closure. He asks you how
the wound will go about healing itself? What do
you tell him to appease his curious mind?
7Wound Healing
- Stages
- hemostasis
- inflammation
- epithelialization
- fibroplasia
- contraction
- scar maturation
8Wound Healing
- Inflammation
- serves to remove bacteria, foreign debris, and
devitalized tissue a biologic debridement - if this stage is prolonged (from infection,
foreign material, etc.) will get persistent
inflammation and result in poor wound healing
9Wound Healing
- Epithelialization
- in sutured wounds, surface of wound develops
epithelial covering impermeable to water in 24-48
hours - eschar and surface debris impair this process by
inhibiting the migration of the epithelial cells
10Wound Healing
- Fibroplasia
- by fourth day fibroblasts begin synthesizing
collagen, initiating scar formation - characterized clinically by pebbled red tissue in
wound base
11Wound Healing
- Contraction
- movement of skin edges toward center of defect,
primarily in direction of underlying muscle - everting skin edges at time of repair accounts
for the subsequent wound contraction
12Wound Healing
- Scar Maturation
- amount of scar tissue influenced by physical
forces acting across wound - strength of wound increases rapidly from day
5-17, more slowly for additional 14 days, and
further collagen remodeling / maturation for 2
years - strength of scar tissue never quite reaches that
of unwounded skin
13Case 2
- Pt presents with two wounds one is sharp,
linear laceration on L hand from a clean knife.
While riding her bike to hospital she falls on a
pristine, flat, clean road and lands on dorsum of
hand producing a jagged irregular laceration. - Which of the two has higher chance of infection?
Why?
14Case 3
- Alcoholic, diabetic street person presents with
laceration to R forearm. He thinks he did it
about 24 hours ago but cant remember mechanism.
On examination small amount of soil type debris
in wound. - How will you manage this case?
15Wound Evaluation HistoryAmerican College of
Emergency Physicians Clinical policy for the
initial approach to patients presenting with
penetrating extremity trauma. Ann Emerg Med Vol
33 No. 5 May 1999
- identify all extrinsic and intrinsic factors that
jeopardize healing and promote infection - mechanism of injury
- time of injury
- environment in which wound occurred
- potential contaminants, foreign bodies
- species of animal if bite
- pts medical problems / immune status
- tetanus immunization status
- handedness / vocation
16Wound Evaluation - History
- Risk Factors for wound infection (Singer et al.
Risk factors for infection in patients with
traumatic lacerations. Academic Emergency
Medicine. July 1, 2001 8(7) 716-20) - older age
- diabetes
- laceration width
- presence of foreign body
17Wound Evaluation History (mechanism of injury)
- Type of force causing wound
- Acute traumatic wounds caused by one or
combination of 3 forces - shear
- compressive
- tensile
18Wound Evaluation History (mechanism of injury)
- Shear Forces
- produced by sharp objects that cut through the
skin - amount of energy required to cut skin with sharp
object is low therefore little energy directed to
surrounding tissue with minimal cell damage - results in lower risk of infection and problems
with wound healing because remaining tissue is
not devitalized
19Wound Evaluation History (mechanism of injury)
- Compressive and Tensile Forces
- compressive forces produced when blunt object
impacts the skin at right angles (wounds tend to
be stellate or complex with ragged/shredded
edges) - tensile forces produced when a blunt object
impacts skin at oblique angles (wounds tend to be
triangular or produce a flap) - compared to shear forces much more energy
deposited with high amounts applied to area
around wound - results in devitalization of surrounding tissue
with higher incidence of wound infection
20Wound Evaluation History (mechanism of injury)
- Shear vs. Compressive / Tensile Forces
- Infection
- with compressive / tensile forces the critical
number of bacteria needed to produce infection is
much lower (100,000 organisms per gram of
tissue) - with shear forces the number of bacteria needed
to produce infection is much higher 10,000,000
organisms per gram of tissue
21Wound Evaluation History (time of injury)
- golden period refers to time after injury that
wound can be safely closed without increased risk
of infection - delay in wound cleaning is most important
variable - contrary to popular belief not a fixed number of
hours - there is little change in wound infection rates
in most areas of the body for up to 19 hours
after a variety of traumatic injuries, and
infection rates of simple wounds involving the
head are essentially unaffected by the interval
between injury and repair - Berk et al. Evaluation of the golden period
for wound repair 204 cases from a third world
emergency department. Ann Emerg Med 17496, 1988
22Wound Evaluation History (time of injury)
- accelerated growth phase of bacteria starts at 3
hours post wound
23Timing of Closure
- primary, delayed primary, secondary
- decision to close a laceration is multifactorial
- base decision on wound history, physical
examination, host factors - Revisit Case 3
24Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Examine for
- amount of tissue destruction
- degree of contamination
- damage to underlying structures
- Wounds may be classified into 6 categories
- lacerations
- abrasions
- crush wounds
- avulsion wounds
- puncture wounds
- combination wounds
25Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Lacerations
- if caused by shear force little tissue damage at
wound edge and margins are sharp and wound
appears tidy - if caused by compressive or tensile forces, more
force is required to produce the laceration and
therefore more tissue trauma often appear
jagged, contused
26Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Abrasions
- results from forces applied in opposite
directions (e.g. skin grinding against road
surface)
27Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Crush Wounds
- caused by impact of an object against tissue,
especially over a bony surface, which compresses
the tissue - at higher risk for subsequent compartment syndrome
28Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Avulsions
- wounds in which a portion of tissue is completely
separated from its base and is either lost or
left with a narrow base of attachment
29Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Puncture Wounds
- wounds with a small opening and whose depth
cannot be visualized - Combination Wounds
30Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Amount of tissue destruction / devitalized tissue
31Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Degree of Contamination
- bacteria and foreign material
- primary determinants of wound infection are the
amount of bacteria and dead tissue remaining in
wound - the presence of undetected reactive foreign
bodies in sutured wounds almost guarantees
infection
32Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Underlying Structures
- nerves, vessels, tendons, bones, joints
33Wound Evaluation Physical Examination
- Wound Location
- has considerable importance in the risk of
infection - high endogenous bacterial counts in hairy scalp,
forehead, axilla, groin, foreskin of penis,
vagina, mouth, nails - wounds in areas of high vascularity more easily
resist infection (scalp, face)
34Delayed Primary Closure
- wound preparation (debridement, cleansing, etc.),
dress with saline soaked fine mesh gauze, follow
up in 72-96 hours for debridement, repeat
cleansing and closure if no evidence of infection
35Skin Preparation
- prevents transfer of bacteria into wound from
instruments, suture needles, gloved fingers - use whatever (no research suggest one better than
another) - important to distinguish between skin preparation
and wound cleansing
36Wound Cleansing (not skin preparation)
- Soaking
- of little value and may actually increase
bacterial counts (Lammers, Fourre, Callaham et
al. Effect of poviodine-iodine and saline soaking
on bacterial counts in acute, traumatic
contaminated wounds. Ann Emerg Med 19 709, 1990)
37Wound Cleansing (not skin preparation)
- Mechanical Scrubbing
- gentle scrubbing may be useful in wounds older
than 3-4 hours (a glycoprotein matrix enters
wound and may protect it from further attempts to
lower bacterial counts with irrigation) - Debridement of devitalized tissue paramount to
reducing risk of infection - Scalpel excision of wound margins can be used in
grossly contaminated wounds
38Wound Cleansing (not skin preparation)
- Irrigation
- Equipment?
- 35 cc syringe with 18 G needle produces about 7-8
psi - Solution?
- NS or 1 poviodine-iodine solution (ie. diluted
Betadine) (Dire and Walsh A comparison of wound
irrigation solutions used in the emergency
department. Ann Emerg Med 1990 19704-708) - infection rate in poviodine arm was lower than
saline arm but not statistically significant
(4.3 vs 6.9) - Hydrogen peroxide kills fibroblasts and occludes
microvasculature, chlorhexadine toxic to tissue
defenses, detergents contained in scrub solutions
cause tissue damage in wounds - How much? (all expert opinion no clinical
trials) - minimum of 100-300 cc with continued irrigation
until all visible particles removed - 50-100 cc per cm of wound length
- if irrigation alone is ineffective in removing
contaminants from a wound, the wound should be
lightly scrubbed
39Prophylactic Antibiotics - Topical
- Ointments
- reduce formation of crust which could inhibit
epithelialization - prevent dressing from adhering to wound
- routine use encourages pt inspection of wound
- one randomized, double blind clinical trial
demonstrated reduced infection rate - Dire et al. Prospective evaluation of topical
antibiotics for preventing infections in
uncomplicated soft-tissue wounds repaired in the
ED. Acad Emerg Med 24, 1995
40Prophylactic Antibiotics - Systemic
- no role for routine antibiotic use for most
wounds (Cumming et al. Antibiotics to prevent
infection of simple wounds A meta-analysis of
randomized studies. Am J Emerg Med 13396, 1995) - specific wounds contaminated with debris, feces,
saliva punctures, bites, extensive tissue
destruction, wounds in avascular areas, oral
lacerations, wounds involving joint spaces,
tendons, or bones presence of impaired host
defenses
41Wound Closure - Sutures
- Classification nonabsorbable vs absorbable
- Size (according to diameter) 6-0 face, 5-0,4-0
trunk and extremities, 3-0 scalp, sole of foot
42Wound Closure Sutures - Nonabsorbable
- Natural or Synthetic / Monofilament or
Multifilament - natural incite tissue reactivity (therefore
increase risk of infection, synthetic less so) - monofilament have less pliability and knot
security than multifilament but multifilament
increase risk of wound infection - Natural multifilament - silk
- easiest to handle but poses greatest risk of
infection because of tissue reactivity (it is
both a natural suture and multifilament) - Synthetic monofilament nylon (Ethilon),
polypropylene (Prolene), polybutester (Novafil) - Synthetic multifilament nylon, polyester
(Mersilene)
43Wound Closure Sutures - Absorbable
- Natural (collagen) or Synthetic (polymers)
- Natural plain gut and chromic gut
- plain gut loses tensile strength the quickest
(half life 5-7 days) produces marked tissue
reactivity generally used only for oral mucosal
closures (because heal so quickly) - chromic gut absorbed less rapidly than plain gut
but faster than synthetics (half life 10-14
days) less tissue reactivity than plain gut
because of chromic coating useful in situations
where suture removal may be difficult
44Wound Closure Sutures - Absorbable
- Synthetic Multifilament polyglycolic acid
(Dexon), polyglactin 910 (Vicryl) - most commonly used in emerg for sq layers
- Synthetic Monofilament - polyglyconate (Maxon),
polydioxanone (PDS II) - Remember presence of any suture material in a
wound increases risk of infection subcutaneous
sutures have highest risk
45Wound Closure - Staples
- lower tissue reactivity than even the least
reactive suture material - get less accurate closure with higher chance of
malapposition of wound edges and development of
scar - generally reserved for sites where scar is less
of an issue (hairy scalp) - Kanegaye et al. Comparison of skin stapling
devices and standard sutures for pediatric scalp
laceration A randomized study of cost and time
benefits. J Pediatr 130808, 1997
46Wound Closure - Tapes
- useful for flat, dry, nonmobile surfaces where
wounds fit together with no tension ie
superficial, straight laceration under little
tension - more resistant to infection than sutured wounds
- adherence of tapes improved with use of benzoin
to skin surface - recommend not getting wet but
- should stay in place as long as equivalent suture
and will spontaneously detach as underlying
epithelium exfoliates
47Wound Closure Tissue Adhesives
(2-octylcyanoacrylate)
- closes wounds by forming an adhesive layer on top
of intact epithelium, which holds edges together - cause inflammatory reaction within wounds
- Useful
- edges less than 5 mm apart, clean, sharp edges,
clean nonmobile areas, laceration less than 5 cm
in length - Not useful
- wounds near eye, on mucous membranes or mucosal
surfaces, wet wounds or those exposed to body
fluids, or in areas with dense hair, wounds under
significant tension
48Wound Closure Tissue Adhesives
(2-octylcyanoacrylate)
- Literature
- in selected lacerations produces cosmetic
appearance that is comparable with standard
suture closure - Singer et al. Prospective, randomized, controlled
trial of tissue adhesive (2-octylcyanoacrylate)
vs. standard wound closure techniques for
laceration repair. Acad Emerg Med 1998 594-99 - Quinn et al. A randomized trial comparing
octylcyanoacrylate tissue adhesive and sutures in
the management of laceration. JAMA
19972771527-1530 - Quinn et al. Tissue adhesive versus suture wound
repair at 1 year Randomized clinical trial
correlating early, 3 month, and 1 year cosmetic
outcome. Ann Emerg Med 199832645-649 - Maw et al. A prospective comparison of
octylcyanoacrylate tissue adhesive and suture for
the closure of head and neck incisions. J
Otolaryngol 19972626-30 - may be useful for wounds under higher skin
tension - Saxena Octylcyanoacrylate tissue adhesive in the
repair of pediatric extremity lacerations. Am
Surg 1999 May65(5)470-2 - in above study they looked at 32 children with
high skin tension lacerations (hand, feet, over
joints). Following closure splints were applied
to restrict movement
49Wound Closure Tissue Adhesives
(2-octylcyanoacrylate)
- Application
- hold wound edges together with tissue forceps
(???), lightly wipe applicator tip over area
starting at least 5 mm from edge of wound in
direction of long axis of wound (some authors
support perpendicular application), 3-4 thin
layers, hold wound edges together for 60 s post
application - avoid ointments and dressings
50Wound Closure Tissue Adhesives
(2-octylcyanoacrylate)
- Tips
- avoid latex gloves use vinyl gloves
- avoid plastic instruments (ie. tissue forceps)
- if enters wound needs to be wet sponged
immediately - use antibiotic ointment for removal of hardened
Dermabond in wound
51Specific Wounds Face
- high vascularity therefore low incidence of
infection - debride minimally to preserve normal facial
contours - be more aggressive with layered closure
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53Specific Wounds - Forehead
- unrepaired muscle layers more likely to produce
scars - be liberal with deeper sutures in wounds under
tension - reapproximate skin tension lines and hairline
precisely
54Case 7
- 8 month old boy presents with 2 days progressive
lethargy with weakness L side of body. 1 month
ago was bitten on scalp by dog. What has
happened and how?
55Specific Wounds - Scalp
- 5 layers
- can bleed
- shaving increases risk of infection clip hair or
use ointment to mat it down - check for disruption of galea and repair if
present (either single or layered closure) - subaponeurotic (subgaleal) loose connective
tissue contains emissary veins that communicate
with intra-cranial venous sinuses - subgaleal hematomas can become infected and
infection can be transmitted intra-cranially via
emissary veins
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57Specific Wounds - Eyebrow
- minimal if any debridement if needed angle
scalpel parallel to direction of hair shafts to
minimize damage to hair follicles and resulting
alopecia - never shave eyebrows
- use edges to serve as landmarks for
reapproximation
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59Specific Wounds - Eyelids
- Layers (out to in) skin, subcutaneous tissue,
muscle (orbicularis oculi and levator palpebrae
in upper eyelid), supporting tissue (forward
continuation of sub-galeal aponeurotic layer of
scalp), tarsal plate (dense fibroelastic plate),
conjunctiva - with any eyelid laceration ensure no penetrating
globe injury
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61Specific Wounds - Eyelids
- When to repair
- superficial use 6-0 or 7-0 nonabsorbable
synthetic, small bites - When to refer
- lacerations involving inner surface of lid
- lacerations involving lid margins (imperfect
closure results in ectropion or entropion) - lacerations involving lacrimal duct (clue is
laceration of lower lid medial to punctum) - lacerations associated with ptosis (levator
injury) - lacerations extending into tarsal plate
62Specific Wounds - Ears
- Anatomy
- auricle (pinna) modified horn shaped structure
composed of elastic cartilage covered by skin
converges onto the external auditory meatus
(canal) - earlobe
- with blunt forces ensure no ruptured TM
- examine closely for subchondral hematoma
- absolutely have to avoid persistent hematoma
- need perfect hemostasis to prevent formation of
hematoma - if present consider plastics or ENT referral
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64Specific Wounds - Ears
- gaping through and through lacerations require 3
layer closure - 1st one or two sutures will approximate
cartilage edges, include anterior and posterior
perichondrium in suture - 2nd approximate posterior skin
- 3rd anterior surface of ear using landmarks
joined point to point - all repaired ears should be enclosed with
compression dressing
65Specific Wounds - Nose
- Anatomy
- separated into two halves by the septum
(cartilaginous structure) - tip formed by two C-shaped alar cartilages
covered directly by skin - Exposed cartilage increases risk of infection and
therefore needs to be covered - Nasal trauma can result in septal hematoma
- can lead to permanent thickening of the septum
with subsequent airway obstruction - pressure from a septal hematoma may cause
necrosis and subsequent erosion / rupture of
septum - aspirate with 18G needle or horizontal incision
at base nasal packing following drainage will
prevent reaccumulation
66Specific Wounds - Lips
- Anatomy
- skin, vermilion border, vermilion, oral mucosa
- obicularis oris
- Always inspect intraoral and mucosal lip wounds
for foreign bodies esp. teeth and teeth
fragments - Lacerations through vermilion border
- use traction to the lips place first stitch at
vermilion border need perfect alignment - then repair obicularis oris
- then repair skin and remainder of lip
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69Specific Wounds - Lips
- Through and through lacerations
- 3 layer closure 1st mucosal layer with
rapidly absorbable suture 2nd orbicularis
oris 3rd skin
70Specific Wounds IntraoralArmstrong.
Lacerations of the Mouth. Emergency Medicine
Clinics of North America Vol 18, No 3 August 2000
- Irrigation as per normal
- lacerations of buccal mucosa and gingiva heal
without repair of wound edges not widely
separated - Small (lt2cm) intraoral lacerations need not be
repaired - Close bigger lacerations and lacerations with
flaps that fall between chewing surfaces with
absorbable sutures (plain gut, chromic gut or
synthetic absorbables)
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73Specific Wounds Finger tip and nail injuries
- Anatomy
- eponychium, lunula, nail root, nail, hyponychium,
germinal matrix, nail bed (matrix) - finger tip injuries are defined as occurring
distal to the insertion of the flexor and
extensor tendons at the level of the lunula - classified as Zone I, II, III
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76Specific Wounds Finger tip and nail injuries
- Tip injuries with skin and pulp tissue loss only
(no exposed bone) - if less than 1 square cm can treat conservatively
with serial dressing changes alone (wound heals
by secondary intention) - if severed skin tip available can use as full
thickness graft amputated tissue is debrided,
de-fatted, then sutured in place - if greater than 1 square cm can consider using
split or full thickness graft from distant site
vs conservative management
77Specific Wounds Finger tip and nail injuries
- Tip injuries with exposed bone
- if bony protuberance lt 0.5 cm and soft tissue
defect less than 1 square cm trim back bone with
rongeuer and consider leaving wound open to heal
by secondary intention with serial dressing
changes - if wound dorsal obliquely angulated can treat
with bone shortening followed by primary closure
of wound using adjacent volar tissue - amputations in a transverse or volar obliquely
angulated often require referral for
sophisticated flaps
78Specific Wounds Finger tip and nail injuries
- Nail Growth
- germinal matrix produces bulk of nail plate
- sterile matrix produces a layer of cells that is
added to the under surface of the growing nail - if nail bed injury results in scarring of sterile
matrix will get a poorly adherent nail with
ridging cosmetically not appealing - takes 4 months for a new nail to reach hyponychium
79Specific Wounds Finger tip and nail injuries
- Injuries to nail and surrounding structures
- nail bed injured when force directed to dorsum of
nail crushing nail bed against underlying tuft of
distal phalanx - Subungual hematoma
- tradition deems that if occupies more than 50 of
nail bed area, remove nail and repair associated
nail bed laceration - Two prospective studies found simple trephination
produced good results (Seaberg et al. Treatment
of subungual hematomas with nail trephination A
prospective study Am J Emerg Med 9209, 1991.
Meek et al. Subungual hematomas is simple
trephining enough? J Accid Emerg Med 15269,
1998) - Roberts and Hedges suggest that if nail adherent
do not routinely remove nail to search for bed
laceration - remove nail and fix bed lacerations if nail
partly avulsed or loose, or if there are deep
lacerations that involve the nailbed - replace avulsed nail after bed repair and suture
in place
80Case 4
- 16 year old healthy male playing tennis steps on
a nail that punctures bottom of shoe and
punctures sole of foot. - How will you approach and manage this pt?
81Specific Wounds Puncture WoundsReference Up
To Date 2000
- usually due to nails
- deeper the penetration, higher the incidence of
infection - wounds in area of MTP joints penetrate deeper
because this is weight bearing area - increased risk of infection with wounds to
forefoot or shoe wearing at time of puncture
82Specific Wounds Puncture Wounds
- Microbiology
- partly dependent on environmental location
- Staph aureus, beta-hemolytic streptococci (GAS),
gram negatives - pseudomonas common with wounds through shoes
83Specific Wounds Puncture Wounds
- Evaluation
- routine wound evaluation as previously discussed
- have low threshold for x-rays, especially re
presence of foreign body
84Specific Wounds Puncture Wounds
- Initial Management
- no prospective trials in literature
- Tetanus
- foreign body removal
- surface scrubbing
- questionable role for irrigation
- probably no role for coring, probing
- rest, foot elevation
85Specific Wounds Puncture Wounds
- Antibiotics
- no prospective, randomized trials
- consider wound and host factors
86Case 5
- Pt working in lumbar yard and walks by piece of
wound catches leg on it and ends up puncturing
lower leg with piece of wood. He feels
something is in there. - Manage
87Soft Tissue Foreign Bodies
- foreign bodies promote infection, prolong
inflammatory phase of healing and result in poor
wound healing - infections resulting from foreign bodies are
typically resistant to antibiotics - every wound has a potential foreign body
- listen to pts if they think something in there
- all wounds require deliberate and careful
exploration
88Soft Tissue Foreign Bodies
- Radio-opaque
- metal, aluminum, bone, teeth, glass, certain
plastics, gravel, sand - obtain x-rays with underpenetrated soft-tissue
technique - Radio-lucent
- organic material like wood, thorns, cactus
spines, some fish bones, most plastics - sometimes indirect evidence of presence
(radiolucent filling defect when object is less
dense than surrounding tissue)
89Soft Tissue Foreign Bodies
- if wound caused by radio-opaque material and no
foreign body found on exploration or plain films
end search otherwise - CT
- Ultrasound
- MRI
90Soft Tissue Foreign Bodies
- Not all need to be removed
- Indications for foreign body removal
- Potential for inflammation or infection
- Toxicity
- Functional and cosmetic problems
- Potential for later injury
91Case 6
- 25 year old female piano player presents with 8
cm curvilinear laceration to dorsum of dominant
hand from a dog bite.
92Specific Wounds - Bites
- Epidemiology
- 60-90 dog bites, cats 1-15, rodents 1-7, other
species less than 2 - Dog Bites
- jaws can exert force but teeth not sharp
- results in relatively superficial crush injuries
- face and scalp most common site in children
- incidence of infection 5-10
- infection rate on face 1-5
93Specific Wounds - Bites
- Cat Bites
- typical bite is a puncture wound
- possess long, slender, pointed teeth
- overall infection rate about 14 (80 according
to 2001 Sanford Guide) 28-80 in NEJM article
94Specific Wounds - Bites
- Microbiology of dog and cat bites (Talan et al.
Bacteriologic Analysis of Infected Dog and Cat
Bites. NEJM January 14, 1999) - almost always polymicrobial
- aerobes, anaerobes
- Pasteurella canis most common isolate in dog
bites - Pasteurella multocida most common isolate in cat
bites - authors suggest that if antibiotics prescribed a
beta lactam antibiotic combined with a beta
lactamase inhibitor would be appropriate choice
for prophylaxis
95Specific Wounds - Bites
- Dog Bite Management (Cummings. Antibiotics to
prevent infection in patients with dog bite
wounds a meta-analysis of randomized trials.
Ann Emerg Med 199423) - face, scalp, trunk solid support for primary
closure - ?distal extremities look at wound and patient
factors can probably primarily suture all dog
bite wounds - prophylactic antibiotics only in high risk wounds
(hands, wound / patient factors)
96Specific Wounds Bites
- Cat Bite Management
- puncture wounds should be left open
- primary closure on face and scalp only
- consider delayed primary closure in other
locations - consider prophylactic antibiotics in all cases
97Specific Wounds Human Bites
- Epidemiology
- 60-75 hands and upper extremities
- Microbiology
- polymicrobial
- mixed gram positive, gram negative, aerobic,
anaerobic - eikenella corrodens
- Hepatitis B
- Complications of human bites most commonly occur
in hand wounds
98Specific Wounds Human Bites
- Management
- routine wound evaluation and care
- non-hand wounds can be closed primarily
- hand wounds need to be left open to heal by
secondary intention or delayed primary closure - routine prophylactic antibiotics in hand wounds
only
99Objectives
- Wound Healing
- Wound Evaluation History, Physical examination
- Wound Preparation
- Wound Closure
- Specific Wounds
- face, scalp, eyebrow, eyelid, ear, lips,
intraoral, puncture, fingertip and nail, foreign
bodies, bites
100Take Home Points
- Evaluate wound and patient factors when
determining closure, risk of infection,
antibiotics, etc. infection is enemy - Lacerations caused by compressive/tensile forces
result in more complications than lacerations
caused by knife cut (shear forces) - golden period is not fixed and dependent on
many variables - V-Y plasty for fingertip amputations
- re bites routine antibiotics for all cat bites
and dog and human bites to hand