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SU5.1-4,SU6.1-2 | Wound Healing and Surgical Infection — Glossary

Glossary — SU5.1-4,SU6.1-2 | Wound Healing and Surgical Infection

Key terms in this module. Tap a term to see its definition.

Abrasion

A superficial graze involving only the epidermis and superficial dermis, with no true tissue gap.

Abscess

A localised, walled-off collection of pus whose essential treatment is drainage; antibiotics alone do not cure it.

Avulsion / degloving

A wound in which skin is torn away from its underlying attachments.

CDC surgical wound classification

A four-class grading of operative wounds by contamination (clean, clean-contaminated, contaminated, dirty/infected) that predicts surgical-site-infection risk.

Cellulitis

A spreading, non-suppurative infection of skin and subcutaneous tissue, usually streptococcal, treated with antibiotics.

Clean (Class I) wound

An uninfected operative wound with no inflammation and no entry into a hollow viscus; SSI rate ~1–2%.

Clean-contaminated (Class II) wound

A wound entering a hollow viscus in a controlled manner without unusual spillage; SSI rate ~3–5%.

Contaminated (Class III) wound

A fresh traumatic wound, or surgery with gross spillage or a major sterile-technique break; SSI rate ~10–15%.

Contusion (bruise)

Blunt injury with intact overlying skin but haemorrhage into the underlying tissues.

Crepitus

A crackling sensation on palpation due to gas in the tissues, a sign of gas-forming infection such as gas gangrene or some necrotizing infections.

Cruse-Foord concept

The idea that wound-infection risk is proportional to the dose of contamination multiplied by bacterial virulence and divided by host resistance.

De-escalation

Narrowing broad-spectrum empirical antibiotics to the specific effective agent once culture and sensitivity results are known.

Debridement

Surgical removal of dead (devitalised) tissue and foreign material from a wound to allow healing and reduce infection.

Devitalised tissue

Dead or non-viable tissue in a wound that acts as a nidus for infection and a barrier to healing and must be removed.

Dirty / infected (Class IV) wound

A wound with established infection, perforated viscus or devitalised tissue; SSI rate >27%.

Empirical therapy

Initial antibiotic treatment directed at the likely organisms before culture results are available, later refined to the proven sensitivity.

Epithelialisation

Migration and proliferation of epithelial cells across a wound surface to restore the epidermal covering.

Gas gangrene

Clostridial myonecrosis, usually caused by Clostridium perfringens, presenting with severe pain, crepitus and toxaemia; treated by urgent debridement and antibiotics.

Granulation tissue

Red, granular tissue of new capillaries and fibroblasts that fills an open wound during the proliferative phase.

Grievous hurt

The more serious legal category of bodily injury, enumerated in section 320 of the Indian Penal Code (e.g. fracture/dislocation of a bone, permanent loss of sight or hearing, hurt endangering life).

Haemostasis

The first phase of healing — vasoconstriction, platelet plug formation and fibrin clot deposition that stops bleeding and provides a provisional scaffold.

Incised wound

A wound from a sharp object with clean, well-defined edges, in which surface length typically exceeds depth.

Inflammatory phase

The phase (day 1 to ~3–5) in which neutrophils then macrophages clear debris and bacteria and secrete growth factors that drive repair.

Lacerated wound

A wound from blunt force with irregular, ragged edges and intact tissue bridges spanning its depth.

Macrophage

The key orchestrating cell of wound healing, continuing debridement and releasing growth factors that initiate the proliferative phase.

Medico-legal case (injury report)

A dated, objective documented record of an injury prepared when a wound may have legal significance, recording site, size, type and surrounding features factually.

Necrotizing fasciitis

A rapidly spreading necrotizing soft-tissue infection tracking along fascial planes — a surgical emergency needing immediate radical debridement.

Primary intention

Healing of a clean wound whose edges are brought together and held in apposition, as in a sutured surgical incision; fast with a neat scar.

Proliferative phase

The phase (~day 3 to 3 weeks) of fibroblast collagen synthesis, angiogenesis, granulation-tissue formation, epithelialisation and wound contraction.

Prophylactic antibiotic

An antibiotic given to prevent infection — a single IV dose within 60 minutes before incision, re-dosed for long operations and stopped within 24 hours.

Puncture (stab) wound

A wound with a small surface opening but potentially great depth, dangerous because the surface belies underlying damage.

Remodeling (maturation) phase

The final phase (weeks to ~1–2 years) in which type III collagen is replaced by organised type I, the scar matures and tensile strength rises to ~70–80% of normal.

Secondary intention

Healing of an open wound from its base by granulation, contraction and epithelialisation, used when there is tissue loss, contamination or infection.

Source control

The physical removal or drainage of the focus of infection — incision and drainage of pus, debridement of dead tissue, removal of infected foreign material — the paramount step in treating established surgical infection.

Staphylococcus aureus

The commonest cause of skin and surgical-site infection; meticillin-resistant strains (MRSA) require glycopeptide cover such as vancomycin.

Surgical infection

An infection that either requires surgical treatment (e.g. an abscess to be drained) or arises as a consequence of a surgical procedure.

Surgical-site infection (SSI)

Infection at or near a surgical incision occurring after operation; its risk rises with the contamination class of the wound.

Tensile strength

The capacity of a wound or scar to resist disruption under tension; a healed scar regains at most ~70–80% of normal.

Tertiary intention (delayed primary closure)

Deliberate leaving of a contaminated wound open for a few days, then closing it surgically once it is clean.

Tetanus

A neurotoxin-mediated disease caused by Clostridium tetani entering a tetanus-prone wound, prevented by appropriate wound prophylaxis.

Tetanus-prone wound

A wound at higher risk of tetanus — more than 6 hours old, deep, soil/faeces-contaminated, containing devitalised tissue, or a puncture, missile or bite wound.

Therapeutic antibiotic

An antibiotic given to treat an established infection — started empirically after cultures, then de-escalated by sensitivity, and always adjunctive to source control.

Tissue bridges

Strands of stronger tissue (vessels, nerves) left intact across a lacerated wound, distinguishing it from an incised wound.

Wound

Any breach in the normal structure and function of skin or underlying tissue, whether traumatic or surgical.

Wound contraction

Centripetal drawing-in of wound edges by myofibroblasts during the proliferative phase, reducing the area to be healed.

Wound healing

The orderly biological process by which injured tissue is restored, proceeding through overlapping phases of haemostasis, inflammation, proliferation and remodeling.

Wound toilet

Cleaning of a wound by copious irrigation (usually with saline) to wash out dirt, clot and loose contamination.

47 terms in this module