Pressure Injuries



Pressure Injuries






Pressure sores

Areas of skin necrosis due to pressure-induced ischaemia found on sacrum, heels, over greater trochanters, shoulders, etc. Also known as decubitus ulcers or bedsores. Incidence higher in hospital (new sores form during acute illness) but prevalence higher in long-stay community settings (healing takes months/years). Average hospital prevalence 5-10% despite drives to improve education and preventative strategies. The financial and staffing resource burden of pressure sores is huge.


Grading

0 Skin hyperaemia

I Non-blanching erythema

II Broken skin or blistering (epidermis ± dermis only)

III Ulcer down to subcutaneous fat

IV Ulcer down to bone, joint or tendon

2 hrs of tissue ischaemia is sufficient for the subsequent development of an ulcer and the causative insult often occurs just prior to or at the time of admission (on ED trolleys, intraoperative, at home). There is considerable lag between the ischaemic insult and the resulting ulcer. Grade I erythema often progress to deep ulcers over days/weeks without further ischaemic insult. Inspect sacrum and heels at least daily.


Risk factors

Include age, immobility (especially postoperative), low or high body weight, malnutrition, dehydration, incontinence, neurological damage (either neuropathy or decreased conscious level), sedative drugs, vascular impairment.

Several scoring systems (eg Waterlow score) combine these factors to stratify risk. They aid/prompt clinical judgement of individual patient risk.


Mechanisms



  • Pressure—normal capillary pressure 24-34mmHg—pressures exceeding 35mmHg compress and cause ischemia. This pressure is easily exceeded on a simple foam mattress at pressure points such as heels


  • Shear—where skin is pulled away from fixed axial skeleton small blood vessels can be kinked or torn. When a patient is propped up in bed or dragged (eg during a lift or transfer) there is considerable shear on the sacrum


  • Friction—rubbing the skin decreases its integrity especially at moving extremities, eg elbows, heels. Avoid crumbs, drip sets and debris between patient and sheets. Massage of pressure areas no longer recommended


  • Moisture—sweat, urine, and faeces cause maceration and decrease integrity



Management

Jul 22, 2016 | Posted by in GERIATRICS | Comments Off on Pressure Injuries

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