Zitelli J
University of Pittsburgh, Chemosurgery Unit, Pennsylvania.
Adv Dermatol. 1987;2:243-67.
Wound healing is a complex sequence of events, beginning with tissue injury, mediated by inflammation, and ending long after reepithelialization is complete. Research and controlled clinical experience have provided a better understanding so that clinicians can influence the events of healing to decrease pain, control bleeding, infection, and cosmetic result as well as speed the time for complete healing. The following is a summary of guidelines for the management of wound healing: (1) wound creation; wounds should be created with minimal necrosis of tissue in order to prevent delays in healing. Electrosurgical, cryosurgical, and laser surgical wounds heal more slowly than wounds created by scalpel excision or curettage. Electro-coagulation should be used sparingly in sutured wounds. Large lesions are best treated in a single stage rather than in divided treatments since the rate of wound healing is not proportional to the area but instead to the logarithm of the area. Thus, the total healing time is much shorter if done in a single treatment session. (2) use of drugs; corticosteroids given before or within three days of wounding in dose of prednisone 40 mg or greater will inhibit wound healing. Vitamin A topically or systemically may reverse this inhibition. Aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents are more important for their effects on platelet function and bleeding than on wound healing. (3) wound dressings; the use of occlusive dressings to promote moist wound healing is the most significant advance in wound management. Occlusive dressings shorten the time for healing, decrease pain, reduce wound contamination, and improve the cosmetic result. (4) control of wound contraction and scar formation; at the time of wound formation, guiding sutures may be helpful in wound healing by secondary intention in order to control the direction of wound contraction and prevent distortion. Intralesional steroids may be useful for hypertrophic scars and keloids. (5) identification of complications; early identification of certain complications can prevent the delays in healing. These include infection, remembering infrequently cultured organisms such as yeast, malnourishment with protein and mineral deficiency, and the knowledge that adhesive-backed wound dressings can cause rewounding of otherwise normally healing wounds. (6) predicting the cosmetic result; wounds healed by secondary intention may provide a cosmetic result superior to surgical repair. Wounds in concave areas usually heal with a better result than wounds managed by flaps or grafts although wounds on convex surfaces usually look best if a skillful primary closure can be performed without distortion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
伤口愈合是一系列复杂的事件,始于组织损伤,由炎症介导,在重新上皮化完成很久之后才结束。研究和对照临床经验使我们有了更好的理解,以便临床医生能够影响愈合过程,减少疼痛、控制出血、感染和改善外观效果,同时加快完全愈合的时间。以下是伤口愈合管理指南的总结:(1)伤口创建;伤口创建时应尽量减少组织坏死,以防止愈合延迟。电外科、冷冻外科和激光外科伤口的愈合比手术刀切除或刮除术造成的伤口更慢。电凝在缝合伤口中应谨慎使用。大型病变最好一次性治疗,而不是分次治疗,因为伤口愈合速度与面积不成正比,而是与面积的对数成正比。因此,单次治疗的总愈合时间要短得多。(2)药物使用;在受伤前或受伤后三天内给予剂量为40毫克或更高的泼尼松等皮质类固醇会抑制伤口愈合。局部或全身使用维生素A可能会逆转这种抑制作用。阿司匹林和其他非甾体类抗炎药对血小板功能和出血的影响比对伤口愈合的影响更重要。(3)伤口敷料;使用封闭性敷料促进伤口湿性愈合是伤口管理中最显著的进展。封闭性敷料缩短愈合时间,减轻疼痛,减少伤口污染,并改善外观效果。(4)控制伤口收缩和瘢痕形成;在伤口形成时,引导缝线可能有助于二期愈合的伤口,以控制伤口收缩方向并防止变形。病灶内注射类固醇可能对肥厚性瘢痕和瘢痕疙瘩有用。(5)识别并发症;早期识别某些并发症可防止愈合延迟。这些包括感染,要记住不常培养的微生物,如酵母菌,蛋白质和矿物质缺乏导致的营养不良,以及粘性伤口敷料会导致原本正常愈合的伤口再次受伤的情况。(6)预测外观效果;二期愈合的伤口可能比手术修复提供更好的外观效果。凹陷区域的伤口通常比皮瓣或移植治疗的伤口愈合效果更好,尽管如果能在不造成变形的情况下进行熟练的一期缝合,凸面伤口通常看起来最好。(摘要截断于400字)