Wound classification (clean/clean-contaminated/contaminated/dirty), golden period, debridement principles, bandage types (wet-to-dry, tie-over, negative pressure), species-specific healing differences.
Wound classification, healing timeline, debridement and closure decision-making, and bandaging strategies. Includes negative pressure wound therapy, drain placement, and species-specific considerations affecting healing rates.
Clean Wound: Surgical incision, minimal contamination; primary closure safe if <8-12 hours post-injury Clean-Contaminated: Minor trauma with minimal soil; closure safe if <12 hours; single dose prophylactic antibiotic considered Contaminated: >12 hours, significant soil, environmental exposure; debride thoroughly; delayed primary closure or secondary healing : Existing infection, devitalized tissue, fecal contamination; aggressive debridement; open management ± delayed closure
"Golden Period": First 6-12 hours post-injury; after this, bacterial colonization (>10^5 organisms/gram tissue) increases infection risk significantly; heavily contaminated wounds may have 3-4 hour window
Phase 1 - Inflammatory (0-3 days)
Phase 2 - Proliferative (3-21 days)
Phase 3 - Remodeling (21 days-1 year+)
Mechanical Debridement (wet-to-dry bandaging, wet-to-moist, surgical):
Enzymatic Debridement (hydrogel, papain-urea):
Antiseptic/Antimicrobial Agents (chlorhexidine 0.05%, dilute povidone-iodine):
Indications: Dead space >2-3 cm, heavy exudate, infection risk, contaminated wounds
Types:
Technique: Place in dependent location; secure with suture; cover with padded bandage Maintenance: Monitor output daily; strips, color, volume; remove once output <0.5 mL/kg/day
High Risk:
Antibiotic Approach:
Dehiscence (premature opening): Inadequate suturing, early suture removal, excessive motion, infection Seroma/Hematoma: Continued fluid accumulation; may require drainage if >5 cm or expanding Infection: Fever, purulent discharge, swelling, delayed healing; culture, sensitivity, systemic antibiotics Proud Flesh (excessive granulation, horses): Bandaging, topical corticosteroids, cautery as last resort Contracture: Scar tissue contraction limiting mobility; more common in chronic wounds Keloidal Scarring: Excessive collagen deposition; cosmetically poor but functionally acceptable