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Primary Care Approach to Wound Management
Kevin Taffe, MD, PhD
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Objectives Evaluate and diagnose wounds that are commonly seen in primary care Provide basic wound management in the office setting Properly triage and refer patients with wounds to the appropriate provider(s)
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Evaluation of wounds
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Goals of evaluation
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Goals of evaluation (cont’d)
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Overview of evaluation
“I need a Wound Center referral for a sore on my backside” Chief complaint History History of trauma, pressure, therapies, etc. Physical
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Description of wound: general approach
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Description of wound: Size
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Tunneling and Undermining
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Examination of Wound Bed
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Wound Drainage
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Wound Edges Raised edge- pressure, trauma, malignancy
Rolled- stagnation, chronicity (epitherlial cells can’t migrate at wound edges) Contraction- healthy, re-epithelialization taking place
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Periwound Skin: Primary Dermatologic Lesions
Pyoderma gangrenosum
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Periwound Skin: Infection
Periwound inflammation Periwound infection Rubor Calor Dolor Rubor Calor Dolor
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Wound Location
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Other exam findings
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Assessment of Wounds: History
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Assessment of Wounds: History
HPI: Location, quality, severity, duration, timing, exacerbating/ relieving factors, associated symptoms. Ask about dressings and other treatments.
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History: Risk factor assessment
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Basic Wound Care Managment
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Treat the underlying cause
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Treat contributing factors
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Dressing basics Remove dead tissue Reduce bacterial burden
Support/ create moist wound environment Protect wound bed
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Dressings: Debridement
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Types of debridement
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Reduce bacterial burden
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Reduce bacterial burden
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Treat infection
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Maintain or create a moist wound environment
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Maintain or create a moist wound environment
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Protect wound bed
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Wound triage and referral
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Triage
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Triage
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Triage
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Triage
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Triage
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Dermatology referral Squamous cell carcinoma of the foot (raised, lobulated, ulcerated)
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Rheumatology referral
Can see ulcerations in rheumatologic disease such as RA (incl Felty’s syndrome); usually long standing but in one series this was first manifestation in 3/366 patients (Shanmugam, Victoria K et al. “Lower extremity ulcers in rheumatoid arthritis: features and response to immunosuppression.” Clinical rheumatology vol. 30,6 (2011): )
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Key take-home points A detailed history is essential for the diagnosis and treatment of wounds. The examination of wounds should include a description of all wound characteristics, location, and important supplemental exam findings. Treatment should be focused on managing the underlying cause, contributing factors, and goal-directed dressing selection. Chronic wounds do not require urgent referral; consider urgent referral to a Wound Center, ER, dermatologist, or rheumatologist in select cases.
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