Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane...

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Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine

Transcript of Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane...

Page 1: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D.Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery

Division of Plastic SurgeryTulane University School of Medicine

Page 2: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

History of Wound Healing1700 BC Papyrus: Wound Healing100 BC Egypt: Wound Healing

Methods1000 AD Gun Powder1500 AD Hot Oil20th Century Scientific Method

Page 3: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

WoundsCustomize

Shotgun approach not acceptable

No two patients OR wounds are identical

58y DM, Neuropathy: unaware of R foot gangrene

Page 4: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 5: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Wounds

Page 6: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Wounds

Reconstructive LadderSimple to

ComplexFormal Debridement, Elevation/ABI’sAppropriate IV ABX, Wound Vac, Skin Graft

Page 7: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Review of Wound HealingThree basic types of healing

PrimaryDelayed PrimarySecondary

Page 8: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

PrimaryWound surfaces opposedHealing without complicationsMinimal new tissueResults optional

Page 9: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Delayed Primary

Left open initiallyEdges approximated 4-6 days later

Page 10: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

SecondarySurfaces not approximatedDefect filled by granulationCovered with epitheliumLess functionalMore sensitive to thermal and mechanical

injury

Page 11: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 12: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 13: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 14: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Three Phases of Wound Three Phases of Wound HealingHealing

Inflammatory Phase Proliferative Phase Remodeling Phase

Page 15: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Three Phases of Wound HealingInflammatory PhaseProliferative Phase

Begins when wound is covered by epithelium

Production of collagen is hallmark7 days to 6 weeks

Remodeling Phase (Maturation Phase)

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Inflammatory PhaseHemostasis and InflammationDays 4 - 6 Exposed collagen activates clotting

cascade and inflammatory phaseFibrin clot = scaffolding and

concentrate cytokines and growth factors

Page 17: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Inflammatory: Granulocytes

First 48 hoursAttracted by inflammatory mediators Oxygen-derived free radicals Non-specific

Page 18: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Inflammatory: MacrophagesMonocytes

attracted to area by complementActivated by:

fibrinforeign body material exposure to hypoxic and acidotic

environmentReached maximum after 24 hours Remain for weeks

Page 19: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Inflammatory: Macrophages Activated Macrophage:

Essential for progression onto Proliferative Phase

Mediate:Angiogenesis: FGF, PDGF, TGF-a&b

and TNF-aFibroplasia: IL’s, EGF and TNF

Synthesize NO Secrete collagenases

Page 20: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 21: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 22: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 23: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 24: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Three Phases of Wound HealingInflammatory PhaseProliferative PhaseRemodeling Phase

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Proliferative PhaseEpithelization, Angiogenesis and

Provisional Matrix FormationBegins when wound is covered by

epitheliumDay 4 through 14Production of collagen is hallmark7 days to 6 weeks

Page 26: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

EpithelializationEpithelialization Basal epithelial

cells at the wound margin flatten (mobilize) and migrate into the open wound

Basal cells at margin multiply (mitosis) in horizontal direction

Basal cells behind margin undergo vertical growth (differentiation))

Page 27: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Proliferative: FibroblastWork horse of wound repairProduce Granulation Tissue:

Main signals are PDGF and EGFCollagen type IIIGlycosaminoglycansFibronectin Elastin fibers

Tissue fibroblasts become myofibroblasts induced by TGF-b1

Page 28: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Wound ContractionActual contraction with pulling of edges

toward center making wounds smallerMyofibroblast: contractile propertiesSurrounding skin stretched, thinnedOriginal dermal thickness maintainedNo hair follicles, sweat glands

Page 29: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Epithelialization/ContractionEpithelialization/Contraction

Page 30: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

EpithelializationEpithelialization

Page 31: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Collagen HomeostasisAfter Wounding (Optimal Healing)

Days 3 - 7 weekCollagen production begins

Days 7 – 42Synthesis with a net GAIN of collagenInitial increase in tensile strength due

to increase amount of collagenDays 42+

Remodeling with No net collagen gain

Page 32: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

CollagenNormal Skin

collagen ratio 4 : 1 Type I/III

Hypertrophic Scarcollagen ratio 2 : 1 Type I/III

Page 33: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 34: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Three Phases of Wound HealingInflammatory PhaseProliferative PhaseRemodeling Phase

Page 35: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Maturation PhaseRandom to organized

fibrils Day 8 through yearsType III replaced by type IWound may increase in

strength for up to 2 years after injuryCollagen organizationCross linking of

collagen

Page 36: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 37: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Impaired Wound Healing

Page 38: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Wound HealingTo treat the wound, you have to treat

the patientOptimize the patient

CirculatoryPulmonaryNutritionAssociated diseases or conditions

Page 39: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Oxygen

Fibroblasts are oxygen-sensitivePO2 < 40 mmHg collagen synthesis

cannot take place Decreased PO2: most common cause of

wound infectionHealing is Energy DependentProliferative Phase has greatly

increased metabolism and protein synthesis

Page 40: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Hypoxia:

Endothelium responds with vasodilation

Capillary leakFibrin depositionTNF-a induction and apoptosis

Page 41: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Edema

Increased tissue pressureCompromise perfusionCell death and tissue ulceration

Page 42: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Infection

Decreased tissue PO2 and prolongs the inflammatory phase

Impaired angiogenesis and epithelialization

Increased collagenase activity

Page 43: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

NutritionLow protein levels prolonged inflammatory phase impaired fibroplasiaOf the essential amino

Methionine is critical

Hydration A well hydrated wound will epithelialize faster

than a dry oneOcclusive wound dressings hasten epithelial

repair and control the proliferation of granulation tissue

Page 44: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

TemperatureWound healing is accelerated at

environmental temperatures of 30°CTensile strength decreases by 20% in

a cold (12°C) wound environment

DenervationDenervation has no effect on either

wound contraction or epithelialization

Page 45: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Diabetes MellitusLarger arteries, rather than the arterioles,

are typically affected Sorbitol accumulationIncreased dermal vascular permeability

and pericapillary albumin depositionImpaired oxygen and nutrient delivery

Stiffened red blood cells and increased blood viscosity

affinity of glycosylated hemoglobin for oxygen contributing to low O2 delivery

impaired phagocytosis and bacterial killingneuropathy

Page 46: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Radiation TherapyAcute radiation injury

stasis and occlusion of small vesselsfibrosis and necrosis of capillariesdecrease in wound tensile strengthdirect, permanent, adverse effect on

fibroblast may be progressivefibroblast defects are the central problem

in the healing of chronic radiation injury

Page 47: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

MedicationsSteroids

Stabilize lysosomes and arrest of inflammation response

inhibit both macrophages and neutrophilsinterferes with fibrogenesis, angiogenesis,

and wound contractionAlso direct effect on Fibroblasts

Minimal endoplasmic reticulumvitamin A

oral ingestion of 25,000 IU per day pre op and 3d post op (not to pregnant women)

Restores inflammatory response and promotes epithelializaton

Does not reverse detrimental effects on contraction and infection

Page 48: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Nutritional Supplements

Vitamin C ( Ascorbic Acid) is an essential cofactor in the

synthesis of collagenexcessive concentrations of ascorbic

acid do not promote supranormal healing

Vitamin Etherapeutic efficacy and indications

remain to be definedlarge doses of vitamin E inhibit

healingincrease the breaking strength of

wounds exposed to preoperative irradiation

Page 49: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Nutritional SupplementsGlutamine

Enhance actions of lymphocytes, macrophages and neutrophils

GlycineInhibitory effect on leukocytes, might reduce

inflammation related tissue injuryZinc

common constituent of dozens of enzymesInfluences B and T cell activityepithelial and fibroblastic proliferation is

impaired in patients with low serum zinc levels

Page 50: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Factors in Wound HealingSmoking

1ppd = 3x freq of flap necrosis2ppd = 6x freq of flap necrosisNicotine acts via the sympathetic system

vasoconstriction and limit distal perfusion1 cigarette = vasoconstriction > 90 min

Decrease proliferation of erythrocytes, macrophages and fibroblasts

Smoke contains high levels of carbon monoxide shifts the oxygen-hemoglobin curve to the left decreased tissue oxygen delivery

Page 51: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Syndromes Associated with Abnormal Wound HealingCutis Laxa

Think defective elastin fibersCongenital

AD, recessive or X-linked recessiveAcquired

Drug, neoplasms or inflammatory skin conditions

Ehlers-Danlos SyndromeThink defective collagen metabolismAD and recessive patters10 phenotypes

Page 52: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Syndromes Associated with Abnormal Wound HealingEhlers-Danlos Syndrome

Connective tissue abnormalities due to defects:Inherent strengthElasticityIntegrityHealing properties

Page 53: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Syndromes Associated with Abnormal Wound HealingEhlers-Danlos Syndrome

Four major clinical featuresSkin hyper-extensibilityJoint hyper-mobilityTissue fragilityPoor wound healing

Page 54: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Electrostimulation

Electrical current applied to woundsIncreases migration of cells109% increase in collagen40% increase in tensile strength1 to 50 mA direct or pulsed based on

wound

Page 55: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Hyperbaric Oxygen

Developed 1662 by Henshaw: DomicilliumAtmospheric pressure at sea level = 1

ATA = 1.5ml O2/dLNormal SubQ O2 tension is 30-50 mmHg.SubQ O2 tension < 30 mmHg = chronic

wound

Page 56: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Excessive Healing

Hypertrophic ScarsKeloids

Page 57: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 58: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

KeloidsExtends beyond original boundsRaised and firmRarely occur distal to wrist or kneePredilection for sternum, mandible and

deltoidRate of collagen synthesis increased Water content higherIncreased glycosaminoglycans

Page 59: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Keloid TreatmentTriamcinolone injections3-4 weeksCross linking modulatedInjections continued until no excess

abnormal collagenExcisePrevention during healing – pressure and

injection

Page 60: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Keloid

Page 61: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Keloid

Page 62: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 63: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.
Page 64: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Questions

Page 65: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

The proliferative phase of wound healing occurs how long after the injury?

A. 1 dayB. 2 daysC. 7 daysD. 14 days

Page 66: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Which type of collagen is most important in wound healing?

A. Type IIIB. Type VC. Type VIID. Type XI

Page 67: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

The tensile strength of a wound reaches normal (pre-injury) levels:

A. 10 days after injuryB. 3 months after injuryC. 1 year after injuryD. never

Page 68: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Which of the following is commonly seen in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?

A. Small bowel obstructionsB. Spontaneous thrombosisC. Direct hernia in childrenD. Abnormal scarring of the hands with

contractures.

Page 69: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Steroids impair wound healing by:

A. Decreasing angiogenesis and macrophage migration

B. Decreasing platelet plug integrityC. Increasing release of lysosomal enzymesD. Increasing fibrinolysis

Page 70: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Supplementation of which of the following micronutrients improves wound healing in patients without micronutrient deficiency?

A. Vitamin CB. Vitamin AC. SeleniumD. Zinc

Page 71: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Signs of malignant transformation in a chronic wound include:

A. Persistent granulation tissue with bleedingB. Overturned wound edgesC. Non-healing after 2 weeks of therapyD. Distal edema

Page 72: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

The treatment of choices for keloids is:

A. Excision aloneB. Excision with adjuvant therapy (e.g. radiation)C. Pressure treatmentD. Intralesional injection of steroids

Page 73: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

The major cause of impaired wound healing is:

A. AnemiaB. Diabetes mellitusC. Local tissue infectionD. Malnutrition

Page 74: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Bradykinin, serotonin, and histamine in wounds are released from:

A. LymphocytesB. Mast cellsC. Polymorphonuclear leukocytesD. Platelets

Page 75: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Platelets in the wound form a hemostatic clot and release clotting factors to produce:

A. FibrinB. FibrinogenC. ThrombinD. Thromboplastin

Page 76: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

In a healing wound, metalloproteinases are responsible for:

A. Establishing collagen cross-linkB. Glycosylation of collagen moleculesC. Incorporation of hydroxyproline into the

collagen chainD. Initiating collagen degradation

Page 77: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Severe cases of hidradenitis suppurativa in the groin area are best managed by excision of the involved area and?

A. Closure by secondary intensionB. Delayed primary closureC. Primary closureD. Split thickness skin grafting

Page 78: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

All of the following statements about keloids are true except?

A. Keloids do not regress spontaneouslyB. Keloids extend beyond the boundaries of the

original woundC. Keloids or hypertrophic scars are best managed

by excision and careful reapproximation of the wound

D. Keloid tissue contains an abnormally large amount of collagen.

Page 79: Abigail E. Chaffin, M.D. Assistant Professor of Plastic Surgery Division of Plastic Surgery Tulane University School of Medicine.

Thank You