Wound bed preparation: The impact of debridement and wound cleansing

Publication date: July 2013 Source:Wound Medicine, Volume 1 Author(s): Lars-Peter Kamolz , Thomas Wild Wound healing is a complex series of events that are interlinked and dependent on one another. Acute wounds usually follow a well-defined process. In the past this model of healing has been applied also to chronic wounds, but it is well known that chronic wound healing is different from acute wound healing. Wound bed preparation as a concept allows the clinician to focus systematically on all of the critical components of a non-healing wound to identify the cause of the problem, and implement a care programme in order to achieve wound healing. To assist with implementing the concept of wound bed preparation, the TIME acronym was developed in 2002 by a group of wound care experts. It is important to understand wound bed preparation and TIME within the context of total patient care. Debridement is an integrated part of wound management, achieving certain goals and, thus, creating a healthy wound bed, margins and peri-wound skin with the objective to promote and accelerate healing. Debridement is defined as the removal of foreign material and necrotic tissue from a wound and it can also help to stimulate wound healing. However, not all methods of debridement are the same. Each method has advantages and disadvantages that must be clearly understood. Wound cleansing loosens and washes away cellular debris such as bacteria, exudate, purulent material and residual topical age...
Source: Wound Medicine - Category: Journals (General) Source Type: research