3. Introduction
• Wound
– A break in epithelium with structural & functional
disruption
• Healing
– Ability of the body to replace destroyed tissue
with viable tissue
• Repair
– Replacement of destroyed tissue with granulation
tissue & later scar tissue
4. Wound healing process
Stage Cellular events Clinical features
Haemostasis Vasoconstriction
Platelet aggregation & thrombus
formation
Blood clot to stanch bleeding
Inflammation Neutrophil infiltration
Monocyte infiltration then differentiate
to macrophages
Lymphocyte infiltration
Surrounding tissue exhibit cardinal
features of acute inflammation
Removal and neutralising of infective
and foreign agents
Proliferation Re-epithelialisation
Angiogenesis
Collagen synthesis
Granulation tissue scaffolding initially
(within 48 hours), then converted to
scar tissue
Remodelling Collagen remodelling
Vascular regression & maturation
Wound contraction
Scar relatively avascular
Maximal tensile strength only 80% of
normal skin, plateaus after 3 months
7. Surgical wound classification
Class Definition Examples Risk of SSI
Clean Non-traumatic wounds
Elective surgery
Does not involve entering
hollow viscus lumen
Excision biopsy
Mastectomy
Hernia surgery
Vascular surgery
2%
Clean-
contaminated
Hollow viscus entered with
minimal, controlled spillage of
content
Gastrectomy
Pneumonectomy
Hysterectomy
≤10%
Contaminated Fresh traumatic wounds
Hollow viscus entered with
major, uncontrolled spillage of
content
Minor break in sterile technique
Emergen 20 – 30%
Dirty Prolonged exposed traumatic
wounds
Frank pus or faeces within
operative field
40 – 55%
8. Principles of management
• Irrigation
• Medical
– Antibiotics
– Glycaemic control
• Dressings
• Surgical
• Adjunctive therapies
– Hyperbaric oxygen
9. Reconstructive ladder
• A grading system
• Describes the levels of
increasingly complex
surgical management of
wounds
10. Flap – tissue transferred from its bed to another site
while retaining its vascular attachment
• Free
– Tissue transferred to a distant recipient site after its vascular
supply has been detached and then restored by microvascular
anastomosis at recipient site
• Pedicled
– Tissue transferred to adjacent recipient site while still
retaining its original, designated vascular supply
• Random patterned
– Tissue transferred to adjacent recipient site but lacks a
significant pattern in its vascular design
11.
12.
13.
14. Tissue expansion
• By expanding local skin surrounding the defect to cover
the wound/defect
• Similar colour and texture without compromising the
donor area
• Tissue expander required with multiple sessions of
surgery
15. – Graft – tissue transferred from its bed to another site (or between two individuals)
without its own vascular supply
16.
17. – Closure
• Delayed
– Wound closure is initially delayed to allow drainage of infective and necrotic
material to minimise risk of surgical site infection
– Wound closed with suture later on once deemed adequately clean
• Primary
– Wound edges are approximated, trimmed if necessary, and closed with suture
– Allows healing by primary intention
– Dressings
• Wound edges are left gaping with resulting defect allowed to granulate
from the floor and edges
• Allows healing by secondary intention for relatively dirty wound but
results in larger and more unsightly scar
18. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy
• Breathing 100% oxygen while under increased
atmospheric pressure
• Blood hyperoxygenated by dissolving oxygen within the
plasma
• Indications
– Enhancement of wound, flap and radiation injury wounds
– CO poisoning
– Decompression sickness
– CRAO, idiopathic sudden SNHL
• Absolute contraindication
– Untreated pneumothorax
– Drugs – bleomycin, cisplatin, disulfiram, doxorubicin