A wound is a cut or opening in the skin. It can be just a scratch or a cut that is as tiny as a paper cut. Show
A large scrape, abrasion, or cut might happen because of a fall, accident, or trauma. A surgical cut made by a healthcare provider during a medical procedure is also a wound. Your body has a complex system to patch up skin wounds. Each stage is needed for proper wound healing. Wound healing takes a number of parts and steps that come together to repair the body. Your body heals a wound in four main stages. The stages include:
Keeping the wound clean and covered can help your body repair the area. Stage 1: Stop the bleeding (hemostasis)When you get a cut, scratch, or other wound in your skin, it usually starts bleeding. The first stage of wound healing is to stop the bleeding. This is called hemostasis. Blood begins to clot seconds to minutes after you get a wound. This is the good kind of blood clot that helps to prevent too much blood loss. Clotting also helps to close and heal the wound, making a scab. Stage 2: Scabbing over (clotting)Clotting and scabbing phase has three main steps:
Once your wound isn’t bleeding any more, the body can begin cleaning and healing it. First, the blood vessels around the wound open a bit to allow more blood flow to it. This might make the area look inflamed, or a little red and swollen. It might feel a bit warm too. Don’t worry. This means help has arrived. Fresh blood brings more oxygen and nutrients to the wound — just the right balance to help it heal. White blood cells, called macrophages, arrive on the scene of the wound. Macrophages help clean the wound by fighting any infection. They also send out chemical messengers called growth factors that help repair the area. You might see clear fluid in or around the wound. This means white blood cells are at work defending and rebuilding. Stage 3: Rebuilding (growth and proliferative)Once the wound is clean and stable, your body can begin rebuilding the site. Oxygen-rich red blood cells come to the site to create new tissue. It’s like a construction site, except your body makes its own building materials. Chemical signals in the body tell cells around the wound to make elastic tissues called collagen. This helps to repair the skin and tissues in the wound. Collagen is like a scaffold that other cells can be built on. At this stage in healing, you might see a fresh, raised, red scar. The scar will slowly fade in color and look flatter. Stage 4: Maturation (strengthening)Even after your wound looks closed and repaired, it’s still healing. It might look pink and stretched or puckered. You may feel itching or tightness over the area. Your body continues to repair and strengthen the area. How long it takes to heal a wound depends on how large or deep the cut is. It may take up to a few years to completely heal. An open wound may take longer to heal than a closed wound. According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, after about 3 months, most wounds are repaired. The new skin and tissue is about 80 percent as strong as it was before it was injured, per the University of Rochester Medical Center. A large or deep cut will heal faster if your healthcare provider sutures it. This helps to make the area your body has to rebuild smaller. This is why surgical wounds typically heal faster than other kinds of wounds. Surgery cuts normally take 6 to 8 weeks to heal, according to St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton. Wounds may also heal faster or better if you keep them covered. According to the Cleveland Clinic, wounds need moisture to heal. A bandage also keeps the wound cleaner. Some health conditions can cause very slow healing or stop wound healing. This can happen even if your cut is due to surgery or a medical procedure. Blood supply is one of the most important factors in wound healing. Blood carries oxygen, nutrients, and everything else your body needs to heal the wound site. A wound can take twice as long to heal, or not heal at all, if it doesn’t get enough blood. Risk factorsAlmost 6.5 million people in the United States have wounds that don’t heal well. There are several reasons why a wound may not heal properly. Age can affect how you heal. Elderly adults may have slower healing wounds. Some health conditions may lead to poor blood circulation. These conditions can cause poor wound healing:
A chronic wound heals very slowly or not at all. If you have a chronic wound, you may need to see a specialist. TreatmentsTreatments for slow-healing wounds include:
A wound may heal slowly if it’s infected. This is because your body is busy cleaning and protecting the wound, and can’t get to the rebuilding stage properly. An infection happens when bacteria, fungi, and other germs get into the wound before it fully heals. Signs of an infection include:
Treatment for an infected wound includes:
See your healthcare provider if you think you have an infected wound, no matter how small it is. An infection in a wound may spread if it’s not treated. This can be harmful and cause health complications. Tell your healthcare provider if you have slow-healing cuts or wounds of any size. You may have an underlying condition that slows down healing. Treating and maintaining a chronic condition like diabetes can help skin wounds heal better. Don’t ignore a small cut or scratch that heals slowly. Some people with diabetes and other chronic conditions can get a skin ulcer from a small cut or wound on their feet or legs. This can lead to serious health complications if you don’t get medical treatment. Wound healing happens in several stages. Your wound may look red, swollen, and watery at the beginning. This can be a normal part of healing. The wound may have a red or pink raised scar once it closes. The healing will continue for months to years after this. The scar will eventually become duller and flatter. Some health conditions can slow down or impair wound healing. Some people may get infections or have other healing complications.
Skin is the largest organ in the body and covers the body's entire external surface.
See also Soft Tissue Healing Types of Wounds[edit | edit source]Wounds can be separated into open or closed wounds.
Types of Wound Healing[edit | edit source]Wound healing is classified as primary healing and secondary healing. Primary Healing
Wound Healing Stages in Adults[edit | edit source]In adults, optimal wound healing should involve four continuous and overlapping phases: Haemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodelling .[4] Hemostasis Phase[edit | edit source]The process of the wound being closed by clotting.
Inflammatory Phase[edit | edit source]
Proliferative Phase[edit | edit source]When the wound is rebuilt with new tissue made up of collagen and extracellular matrix
Maturation Phase (Remodelling Stage)[edit | edit source]
Clinical Significance[edit | edit source]Any disruption in wound healing phases leads to excessive wound healing or chronic wound formation. Excessive Wound Healing[edit | edit source]
Chronic Wound Formation[edit | edit source]
Factors Affecting the Wound Healing[edit | edit source]
Wound Care in Physiotherapy[edit | edit source]The most common wounds that are treated by wound care physical therapist are:[11]
Physiotherapy Role[edit | edit source]Physical therapy wound care begins with a comprehensive evaluation and the development of an individualized care plan. [11]
[edit | edit source]Ultrasound in Wound Healing References[edit | edit source]
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