Title: Lotions, Potions and Dressings
1Lotions, Potions and Dressings What do I DO?
- Anna Braden, BSN, RN, CWOCN
2Objectives
- Have a basic understanding of skin and wound
assessment - Have an understanding of basic dressing selection
guidelines based on assessment - Have a basic understanding of product categories
3Anatomy
- Epidermis
- Dermis
- Subcutaneous tissue
- Fascia, Muscle, Bone
4Wound Healing
Injury
- Hemostasis
- Coagulation
- Platelet aggregation
Platelets
- Inflammation
- Macrophages
- Neutrophils
- Granulocytes
- Debridement
- Resistance to
- infection
- Neovascular growth
- Granulation
Proliferation
Epithelialization
Proteoglycan synthesis
Collagen lysis
Collagen synthesis
Maturation remodeling
Contraction
Healed wound
Wound Care An Incredible Visual! Pocket guide,
2009
5Wound healing
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
6Wound Healing
- Partial Thickness
- Epidermis, dermis
- Full Thickness
- Can be shallow or deep
- Subcutaneous tissue
- Fascia, Muscle
7Factors affecting wound healing
- Perfusion/oxygenation
- Nutritional status!!!!
- Infection
- Corticosteroids/medications
- Aging
- Nicotine!!! Smoking
- Denervation
- Obesity
- Diabetes!!!!
- Most of all patients cooperation
8Skin Assessment
- Color
- Texture
- Temperature
- Turgor
- Odor
- Sensations
9Wound Assessment
- Location anatomic landmarks
- Size including
- Undermining
- Tunneling/sinus track
- Wound bed appearance
- Exudate
- Amount characteristics
- Odor
- Pain
- Peri wound skin
10Infection? Yes or No?
- Contamination
- Colonization
- Critical Colonization
- Infection
- Local vs systemic
- Elevated Glucose in diabetics
- Pain in neuropathic extremity
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition, p
270-273
11Skin Products
- Antimicrobial
- Emollient
- Humectant
- Preservative
- Skin protectant
- Surfactant
- Dimethicone
- Petrolatum
- Zinc Oxide
- lt25 creamy
- gt25 pasty
12Dressing Selection 1st Basic Rule
- Dry deep/cavity wound
- Need to ADD moisture
- Need a Filler in order to pack
undermining/tunneling areas - Need a Cover dressing
- Dry shallow/superficial wound
- Need to ADD moisture
Wet shallow/superficial wound Need to
wick/absorb moisture Peri wound skin
Protective barrier film
Wet deep/cavity wound Need to wick/absorb
moisture Need a Filler to pack
undermining/tunneling areas Need a Cover
dressing Peri wound skin Protective
barrier film
13Then Dressing Selection
- Goes on based on
- Does the wound need to be debrided?
- Mechanical, enzymatic, autolytic
- Is there an infection present?
- Does the wound bed remain moist or is it drying
up? - Do the wound edges need to be opened?
- Is the wound bed being protected from injury,
trauma etc.? - Is the wound being insulated?
- A dry cell is a dead cell
14Products
- Terms
- Primary dressing
- Secondary dressing
- Filler
- MVTR Moisture-Vapor Transmission Rate
- Epidermal stripping
15Products - Antimicrobial
- Antiseptics, iodine, honey, hydrofera blue,
mupirocin ointment, silver - Indications
- Partial or full thickness wounds
- Critical colonization, infection
- Odorous wound
- Primary or secondary dressing
- Advantages
- Provides broad range of antimicrobial or
antibacterial activity - Reduces infection
- Prevents infection
- Disadvantages
- Silver - May cause staining
- May cause stinging or sensitization
- Nanocrystalline Silver inactivated by saline
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 292
16Products Calcium alginate
- Called usually alginate
- Polysaccharide derived from brown seaweed
- Partial or full thickness wounds
- Primary dressing/filler
- Usually needs a secondary/cover dressing
- Highly absorbent moderate to heavily draining
wounds - Converts to a viscous/hydrophilic gel
- Hemostatic properties
- Change as needed usually every 24-48 hours
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 292
17Products - Charcoal
- Activated carbon
- Absorbs toxins and wound degradation products
- Indications
- Malodorous wounds
- Fecal fistulas
- Apply as a filter for odor control
- If absorbing drainage, need to change when
saturated
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 292
18Products Collagen
- Enhances deposition of collagen fibers
- Chemoattractant to granulocytes fibroblasts
- Bioresorbable
- Hemostatic properties
- Processed from bovine or porcine sources
- Indications
- Full-thickness wounds with or without depths
- Noninfected wounds
- Minimal to moderate amount of drainage
- Apply to wound base
- Requires a secondary/cover dressing
- Packaged as gels, alginates, sheets, powders
- Contraindicated in bovine sensitivites
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 292
19Products - Composite
- Combine distinct dressing components into a
single dressing - Absorptive part is different than alginate, foam,
hydrocolloid, hydrogel - Bacterial barrier
- Partial or full thickness wounds without depth
- Dry to heavy drainage depending on dressing
components - Primary or secondary dressing
- Can be used with topical medications
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 293
20Products Contact layer
- Protects the wound from direct contact with other
agents/dressings - Conforms to wound shape
- Porous
- Indications
- Partial or full thickness wounds with or without
depth - Infected wounds
- Donor sites
- Split-thickness skin grafts
- Not intended to be changed with every dressing
change
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 293
21Products Fiber gelling
- Hydrofiber
- Moderate to heavy drainage
- Converts to gel - snot-like appearance
- Partial or full thickness wounds
- Usually needs a secondary dressing
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 293
22Products - Foam
- Absorptive and non-adherent
- Indications
- Partial or full thickness wounds with or without
depth - Moderate to heavily drainage
- Contraindicated with dry eschar
- Frequently used as a secondary dressing after
medication and/or primary dressing - If used as primary dressing, apply appropriate
secondary dressing - Change every 24 hours or as needed
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 293
23Products - Hydrocolloid
- Contains gel-forming agents
- Forms a gelatinous mass
- Impermeable to contaminants reducing risk of
infection - Promotes autolysis
- Indications
- Partial or full thickness wound with or without
depth - Minimal to moderate drainage
- Avoid acutely infected wounds and dry eschar
- Use cautiously in diabetics
- Low MVTR
- Change every 3-5 days as needed
- Select dressing 1-2 larger than the wound
- Use light pressure of hands to allow body heat
promote adhesion
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 294
24Products - Hydrogel
- Adds moisture to dry wound bed
- Non-adherent
- Little or no absorption
- Cool soothing
- Various formulations
- Gel, sheets, impregnated gauze, with silver
- Apply according to instructions
- Use appropriate secondary dressing
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 293
25Products Transparent film
- Indications
- Shallow partial thickness
- Dry to minimal drainage nonabsorbent
- Low MVTR
- Can promote autolysis
- Creates second skin
- Apply without tension/stretching
- Allow for 1-2 border around wound
- Use skin sealant around wound edges
- Not for infected wounds
- Change every 4-7 days or as needed
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 293
26Products Medications
- Collagenase/Santyl
- Enzymatic debrider
- Collagenase derived by fermentation of
Clostridium histolyticum - Need physician order
- Need some contact with moist wound bed
- Around edges or cross-hatching by physician
- Xenaderm BCT
- Balsam Peru
- Castor oil
- Improve epithelialization
- Protective covering
- Aids in reduction of pain
- Trypsin mild debrider
- Dakins solution
- 1/16 strength odor control
- 1/25 strength pseudomonas infection
- Metronidazole/Flagyl
- Crushed - odor control
Thomas Hess, C. Clinical Guide to Skin and Wound
care. 2013, 7th Edition, p 557-559
27Peri wound protection
- Prevent epidermal stripping
- Avoid tapes if possible
- Roll gauze, tubular stockinette, Montgomery
straps - Skin sealants
- Maceration
- Skin sealants
- Zinc oxide
- Re-evaluate current dressing and/or frequency
- Infection
- Candidiasis
- Crusting technique with antifungal powder
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 300-301
28Special Consideration Palliative
Wound Care
- S Stabilize the wound
- P Prevent new wounds
- E Eliminate odor
- C Control pain
- I Infection prophylaxis
- A Advanced absorbent wound
- dressings
- L Lessen dressing changes
Haas. M.L., Moore-Higgs, G.J. Principles of Skin
Care and the Oncology Patient.2010. p 105.
29Documentation
- Today EMR/Electronic Medical Record
- Order
- Assessment
- Actual dressing change
- Teaching
- Must meet certain criteria for reimbursement
- Accurate and consistent
- Monitoring
- Legal
Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 2012, 4th Edition,
p 300-301
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33Presentwoc.com
34Worldwidewounds.com
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40References
- Bryant, R., Nix, D. Acute and Chronic Wounds.
Current Management Concepts. 4th Edition. 2012. - Hass, M.L., Moore-Higgs, G.J. 2010. Principles of
Skin Care and the Oncology Patient, p 105, - Milne, C.T., Corbett, L.Q., Dubuc, D.L., Wound,
Ostomy, and Continence Nursing Secrets, Questions
and Answers Reveal the Secrets to Successful WOC
Care. 2003 - Thomas Hess, C. Clinical Guide to Skin and Wound
care. 7th Edition. 2013. - Wound Care An Incredibly Visual! Pocket Guide.
2009. Wound healing, p 21.
41Questions?