wounds: care and treatment william r. dougherty, md facs associate professor of surgery

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Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

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Page 1: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Wounds: Care and Treatment

William R. Dougherty, MD FACS

Associate Professor of Surgery

Page 2: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Goals

• Identify elements of wound healing

• Define differences between acute and chronic wounds

• Treatment options of acute wounds

• Treatment options of chronic wounds

Page 3: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Healing and Regeneration

• Starfish and salamanders heal by regeneration (whole limbs)

• Mammals heal by a combination of scarring and regeneration.

Page 4: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Surgeons Invocation

Give us the ability to operate on the things that cannot be healed

To heal the things that can be healed,

And the wisdom to know the difference.

Page 5: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Acute Wounds

• Acute wounds normally heal in a very orderly and efficient manner.

• Healing is characterized on a four distinct but overlapping faces.

• Hemostasis, Inflammation, Proliferation, and Remodeling

• Specific biologic markers characterize and orchestrate the phases healing of the acute wounds.

Page 6: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Cytokines

• Originally identified cell growth factors, now recognized to have diverse effects.

• Endocrine, autocrine, paracrine and intracrine.

• Cell migration, matrix production, enzyme expression and cell differentiation

Page 7: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

CytokinesCytokine Cell of Origin Function

PDGF PlateletsMacrophagesEndothelial cells

Cell chemotaxis Mitogenic for fibroblasts Stimulates angiogenesis Stimulates wound contraction

TGF-alpha MacrophagesT lymphocytesKeratinocytes

Mitogenic for keratinocytes and fibroblastsStimulates keratinocyte migration

TGF-beta PlateletsT lymphocytesMacrophagesEndothelial cellsKeratinocytes

Cell chemotaxis stimulates angiogenesis and fibroplasia

EGF PlateletsMacrophages

Mitogenic for keratinocytes and fibroblastsStimulates keratinocyte migration

Fibroblast growth factor MacrophagesMast cellsT lymphocytesEndothelial cells

Chemotactic and mitogenic for fibroblasts and keratinocytesStimulates angiogenesis

Page 8: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

CytokinesFibroblast growth factor Fibroblasts Stimulates keratinocyte migration,

differentiation, and proliferation

TNF MacrophagesMast cellsT lymphocytes

Activates macrophages Mitogenic for fibroblasts Stimulates angiogenesis

Interleukin (IL)–1, IL-2, IL-6, and IL-8

MacrophagesMast cellsKeratinocytesLymphocytes

IL-1 - Induces fever and adrenocorticotropic hormone release, enhances TNF-alpha and interferon (INF)–gamma, activates granulocytes and endothelial cells, and stimulates hematopoiesis IL-2 - Activates macrophages, T cells, natural killer cells, and lymphokine-activated killer cells; stimulates differentiation of activated B cells; stimulates proliferation of activated B and T cells; and induces fever IL-6 - Induces fever and enhances release Keratinocyte of acute-phase reactants by the liver IL-8 - Enhances neutrophil adherence, chemotaxis, and granule release

INFs (IFN-alpha, -beta, and -delta) LymphocytesFibroblasts

Activate macrophages Inhibit fibroblast proliferation

Thromboxane A2 Destroyed wound cells Potent vasoconstrictor

Page 9: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Hemostatic Phase

• Platelets come into contact with collagen and extracellular matrix.

• Contact triggers the release of clotting factors as well as essential growth factors and cytokines.

• PDGF platelet derived growth factor

• TGFβ transforming growth factor beta

Page 10: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Inflammatory Phase

• Neutrophils enter the wound site first to remove foreign materials, bacteria and image tissue.

• Macrophages continue the process of phagocytosis and release more PDGF and TGFβ

• Rubor, Tumor, Calor and Dolor

Page 11: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Proliferative Phase

• In response to PDGF and TGFβ fibroblasts migrate in to deposit collagen and extracellular matrix.

• College is the most abundant protein in the animal kingdom, accounting for 30% of the total protein in the human body.

• Epithelial migration and new vessel formation are prominent features.

Page 12: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Proliferative Phase

• Hydroxyproline is key in maintaining tertiary college and structure.

• Vitamin C deficiency and hypoxia both reduce hydroxyproline

• Lysyl oxidase (inhibited by steroids) is responsible for cross-linking collagen from

Page 13: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Collagen

• Type I - Located in all connective tissue except hyaline cartilage and basement membranes

• Type II - Located in hyaline cartilage • Type III - Located in distensible connective tissue (blood

vessels) • Type IV - Located in basement membranes • Type V - Located in all tissues • Type VI - Located in all tissues • Type VII - Located in the dermal-epidermal junction • Type VIII - Located in the Descemet membrane • Type IX - Located in hyaline cartilage • Type X - Located in hypertrophic cartilage and hyaline

cartilage

Page 14: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Remodeling Phase

• The new collagen matrix is metabolized, cross-link and organized.

• Native collagen approaches the strength of steel on a weight per weight basis

• Defects in remodeling main result in low tensile strength or hypertrophic scaring

• The healed wound reaches 80% of the surrounding normal tissue strength in six to eight weeks

Page 15: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Wound healing phases: Overview

Platelets

HEMOSTSIS

Fibrin

Proteoglycans

INFLAMMATION

Neutrophils

Macrophages

Lymphocytes

PROLIFERATION

Time from injury

Fibroblasts

Collagen

Epithelial cells

Endothelial cells

REMODELING

Collagen fibril cross-linking

Scar maturation

Normal Wound Healing

Page 16: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Factors that influence wound healing

• Nutrition• Bacterial contamination• Necrotic tissue / debris• Immune / Bone marrow competence• Edema• Underlying medical conditions• Drug therapy• Radiation therapy

Page 17: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

What’s new: Stem Cells

• Bone marrow derived stem cells

• Circulating and fixed

• Responders to the cell signaling

• Regenerative components

Page 18: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Acute Wounds: Etiology

• Trauma

• Burns

• Vascular

• Immune

• Surgical

• Pressure

• Infection

Page 19: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Chronic Wounds

• Unique biologic markers characterize pathologic healing responses that resulting fibrosis and chronic nonhealing wounds.

• The efficient and orderly processes lost and the wounds are locked in to the state of chronic inflammation and fibrosis.

• This is associated with abundant neutrophil infiltration, reactive oxygen species and district in enzymes.

Page 20: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Fibrosis

• In most conditions of fibrosis are characterized by an increased density of mast cells. Mast cells contain specialized enzymes capable of processing procollagen and it has been suggested that abnormal peptides are produced that can actually stimulate collagen synthesis thus producing fibrosis.

Page 21: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Keloid versus Hypertrophic Scar

• There is one very significant biological marker that distinguishes keloids from hypertrophic scars and that is the absence of myofibroblasts in keloids and an abundance of these contractile cells in hypertrophic scars.

Page 22: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Common Factors

• Loss of epithelial integrity

• Devascularized tissue

• Contamination

• Stimulation of cytokine cascade

• Stimulation of stem cell migration

• Coagulation, Inflammation, Proliferation and Remodeling

Page 23: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Effects of Pressure

• Landis (1930)– Average pressure in arteriolar limb 32 mmHg

• Husain (1953)– Microscopic changes in muscle after 100 mmHg for

one hour• Dinsdale (1974)

– >70 mmHg over 2 hours; irreversible damage– >240mmHg with intermittent relief; no damage

Page 24: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery
Page 25: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Location of Pressure Sores

Page 26: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

The Progression of Disease

• Hyperemia– Seen within 30 minutes– Disappears after 1 hour

• Ischemia– Seen after 2 hours– Erythema disappears after 36 hours

• Necrosis– Seen after 6 hours

• Ulceration– Within 2 weeks

Edberg, Cerny, Stauffer. Phys Ther 53:246, 1973.

Page 27: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Stages

Page 28: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

The Simple Solution

Page 29: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Treatment for Acute Wounds

• Debride

• Decontaminate

• Moist wound healing

• Early Closure

Page 30: Wounds: Care and Treatment William R. Dougherty, MD FACS Associate Professor of Surgery

Treatment for Chronic Wounds

• Debride

• Anti-inflammation therapy

• Antibiotic therapy

• Synthetic substitutes – mod. Cytokines MMPs

• Recruit stem cells