Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

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Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6

Transcript of Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

Page 1: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of SkinChapter 6 Sections 5 & 6

Page 2: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

Objectives• Describe wound healing

• Distinguish among the types of burns, including a description of healing with each type

• Summarize life-span changes in the integumentary system

Page 3: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

The Healing Process• Inflammation is a normal response to injury or stress

• Blood vessels in affected tissues dilate and become more permeable, allowing fluids to leak into damaged tissues

• Inflamed skin may become reddened, swollen, warm and painful to touch

• However, the dilate vessels provide more nutrients and oxygen to the injured site, which aids in healing

• The specific events of the healing process depend on the nature and extent of the injury

Page 4: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

Shallow Cuts• If a cut in the skin is shallow, epithelial cells along its margin

are stimulated to divide more rapidly than usual

• The newly formed cells fill the gap

Page 5: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

4 Stages of Healing for Deep Wounds• Hemostasis

• Inflammation

• Proliferation

• Remodeling

Page 6: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

Deeper Cuts• If the cut extends into the dermis or subcutaneous fat layer, blood

vessels break and the released blood forms a clot in the wound (hemostasis)

• A clot consists of mainly the fibrous protein fibrin, blood cells and platelets trapped in the protein fibers

• Tissue fluids seep into the area and dry

• The blood clot and the dried tissue fluids form a scab that covers and protects the underlying tissues

• Epithelial cells proliferate beneath the scab, bridging the wound

• Fibroblasts migrate into the injured area and secrete collagenous fibers to the bind the edges of the wound (proliferation)

• Cells are stimulated to divide and regenerate the damaged tissue (remodeling)

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Healing Continued• Blood vessels extend beneath the scab

• Macrophages remove dead cells and other debris

• Eventually all the damaged tissue is replaced and the scab falls off

• If the wound is deep, extensive production of collagenous fibers may form an elevation above the normal epidermal surface, called a scar

Page 8: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

Burns• Three types of burns:

• 1st degree

• 2nd degree

• 3rd degree

Page 9: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

1st Degree Burns• Also known as superficial partial-thickness burns

• Occur when the epidermis only is injured

• Skin becomes dry, warm and reddened (erythema)

• Mild edema may occur

• Surface layer of the skin may peel off a few days later

• Healing takes a few days to weeks but no scaring occurs

• Examples: minor sunburn

Page 10: Healing of Wounds and Burns & the Aging of Skin Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6Chapter 6 Sections 5 & 6.

2nd Degree Burns• Also known as deep partial-thickness burns

• Occur when some of the epidermis and some of the underlying dermis is destroyed

• Fluid escapes from the damaged dermal capillaries, forming blisters

• The injured area becomes moist and firm

• It can vary in color from dark red to waxy white

• Examples: exposure to hot objects, hot liquids, flames or burning clothing

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2nd Degree Burn Healing• Healing depends on the stem cells that

are associated with accessory structures of the skin

• Hair follicles, sweat glands and sebaceous glands survive this injury because they extend into the dermis

• During healing, the stem cells divide and their daughter cells grow out onto the surface of the dermis, spread over it, and differentiate as new epidermis

• Scar tissue doesn’t develop unless infection occurs

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3rd Degree Burns• Also known as full-thickness burns

• Occur when epidermis, dermis and the accessory structures of the skin are destroyed

• The injured skin becomes dry and leathery

• It can vary in color from red to black to white

• Examples: immersion in hot liquids or prolonged exposure to hot objects, flames, or corrosive chemicals

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Burn Treatments• 1st degree• Soak in cool water for a few minutes• Apply antibiotic cream• Take ibuprofen or acetaminophen

• 2nd degree• Soak in cool water for several minutes• Apply antibiotic cream• Cover with non-stick bandage and change daily• Take ibuprofen or acetaminophen

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Burn Treatments• 3rd degree• Seek medical attention in an emergency room• Try to elevate burn above the heart• Once in the ER the following steps may be taken:• Securing your airway • Sedation • Removing necrotic skin• Blood transfusions• IV fluids• IV antibiotics• Surgery • Skin grafts

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How Skin Ages• Aging skin affects appearance, temperature regulation, and vitamin D

formation

• Aging effects to the skin:

• Epidermis thins and appears scaly

• Age spots or liver spots appear, which are patches of pigment formed from the oxidation of fats and the production of oxygen free radicals

• Dermis is reduced as creation of collagen and elastin slows

• The combination of a shrinking dermis and the loss of fat in the subcutaneous layer results in wrinkling and sagging of the skin

• Reduction of fibroblasts delay wound healing

• Decrease in oil from sebaceous glands dries the skin

• Slowed melanin production whitens hair

• Hair growth slow, hairs thin and the number of follicles decreases