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Lower Extremity Wound - Venous Stasis Wounds

We are going to discuss 3 different types of lower extremity wounds--Venous, Arterial and Diabetic. It is very important to differentiate between them because their treatment plans can be very different. We will start with Venous Stasis Wounds.

As you know....these wounds are caused by veins that are not pumping well....causing venous insufficiency.

These wounds:

*are located in the “gaiter” area, and

*have irregular borders. They

*are often shallow, and

*have a red/yellow base, and

*often have a large amount of drainage.

The patient will have normal pulses unless they have arterial diagnosis as well.

And they may have some pain that is often worse with legs dependent.

* ABI normal

Treatment for Venous Stasis Wounds

* Always includes some type of Compression:

•Unna boots
•2, 3, 4 layer compression systems
•Compression ace type wraps that give 30-40 mm pressure
•Tubi grip
•Topical treatment--used under the compression
•Any advanced wound care product that is appropriate for the wound--alginate and foam are the most common
•Patient should be taught leg elevation

 

Lower Extremity Wounds - Arterial Wounds

 

•* located most often on the feet/toes/ occasionally on the legs

•* pulses reduced or absent
•* abnormal ABI--below 0.8
•* “cookie cutter” appearance
•* often have necrotic tissue
•* are very painful
•* legs feel better in a dependent position
•* little edema
•* lack of hair on feet and toes
•*vascular assessment
•* if needed and medically possible
•* goals are to keep clean and uninfected
•* control the pain
•* hyperbaric oxygen may be an option

Topical Care can include appropriate advanced wound care treatment

Diabetic Wounds And now Diabetic Wounds: These are caused by diabetic neuropathy. These patients often have a “LOSS of Protective Sensation” to the feet. They may have many foot deformities, such as hammer toes, claw toes, bunions, callous, and Charcot foot (charcot foot is a foot where the structural integrity of the foot is lost by boney changes and inflamation). Diabetic wounds are often found on the plantar area of the foot and over the metatarsal heads. These wounds often have little pain, which can be a problem because the patient may not even recognize that they have the wound, or they may not realize the severity of the wound. These wounds can build up a callous very easily--often making the clinician think the wound is getting smaller, but really the callous is hiding the wound below. These wounds need to be debrided on a regular basis—generally every 1-3 weeks.

Treatment for the Diabetic Foot Wounds

These wounds MUST be offloaded 24/7--this means special shoes, boots, contact casts, special foam padding, wheelchairs, crutches, or some other means. Topical treatments include: alginates with silver, silver gels, collagen products and other advanced wound care products. Negative wound therapy is also often a good choice for these wounds…(it also keeps them off their feet, which is a nice side benefit).

 

Remember to teach all patients diabetic foot care. This may save their foot. Teach patients that the first sign of an infection may not be an elevated temperature, but an elevated blood sugar. BS needs to be at normal levels for wound healing.

 

So, to sum up here, we have briefly covered three different types of lower extremity wounds. Remember that your patient may have just one of these, or could have mixed disease...making the treatment plan and healing much more difficult.

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