Rapid covering and
healing of both acute skin defects and chronic skin defects are
important objectives for wound healing. The best way to heal a wound is
to close it according to surgical standards as quickly as possible after
injury. However, this procedure is limited to those wounds and those
anatomical regions that allow both excision and adaptation of wound
borders to close the wound by primary intention or
per primam (Latin term meaning to close the wound by suturing [or equivalent method] and restructuring of the skin continuity).
In
large-surface and deep wounds in which the primary wound closure is not
possible or not practicable, the most important issue is to dress the
wound with appropriate materials to allow the following: (1) to keep the
wound free of infection, (2) to reduce or eliminate pain, (3) to reduce
or eliminate all potential factors inhibiting natural healing (eg, dead
tissue in burns, superficial fibrosis, necrotic tissue), and (4) to
replace or substitute the missing tissue as much as possible.
Wound repair
Wound
repair involves the timed and balanced activity of inflammatory,
vascular, connective tissue, and epithelial cells. All of these
components need an extracellular matrix to balance the healing process.
Skin wounds heal by the formation of epithelialized scars of different
contraction ability rather than by the regeneration of a true
full-thickness tissue. To minimize scar formation and to accelerate
healing time, different wound dressings and different techniques of skin
substitution have been introduced in the last decades.
Autologous
skin grafting in the form of split- or full-thickness skin is still a
criterion standard. However, in many patients, this technique may not be
practicable for a variety of reasons, and the wound must be allowed to
heal by second intention. Moreover, in cases in which skin grafts are
used, a new wound is created on the donor side. Thus, eliminating a new
wound to close the old one and to close as many tissue defects as
possible without the risk of large area infection, necrosis, tissue
hypertrophy, and contraction, as well as deformation of wound borders,
is a necessity. The next important problem is to reduce or eliminate
scar formation, particularly in the field of large-surface wounds.
Traditional
management of large-surface or deep wounds involves open and closed
methods. In the open method, the wounds are left in a warm, dry
environment to crust over, whereas, in the closed method, wounds are
covered with different kinds of temporary dressings and topical
treatment, including antibiotics, until healing by secondary intention.
The early removal of the dead tissue (eg, in burns) reduced pain, the
number of surgical procedures, and the length of the hospital stay.
The
surgical intervention (ie, tangential excision of partial- or
full-thickness wound) followed by wound closure with autografts or
temporary dressings is one of the currently used methods. In
large-surface, full-thickness wounds, the wound can be excised down to
the fat or the fascia, particularly if infection is present. Excision to
the fat induces the removal of the subdermal plexus of blood vessels
and decreases the take of autografts because this tissue is less
vascularized. Excision down to the fascia induces better take of the
autografts but has aesthetic disadvantages.
Wound debridement can
also be achieved by enzyme digestion of the dead tissues. Proteolytic
enzymes (eg, collagenases used topically) allow a more specific
destruction of necrotic tissues, while preserving viable dermis and
avoiding blood loss, but the treatment can be painful and can increase
the risk of local infection. In addition, it takes a long time to
achieve a clean wound bed.
Wound coverings
Currently
available wound coverings can be divided into 2 categories: (1)
permanent coverings, such as autografts, and (2) temporary coverings,
such as allografts (including de-epidermized cadaver skin and in vitro
reconstructed epidermal sheets), xenografts (ie, conserved pig skin),
and synthetic dressings.
Conventional autograft (epidermis and a
significant amount of dermis) obtained from healthy skin areas is
considered the optimum wound cover in that its viability yields
immediate take (incorporation into the wound bed) and resistance to
wound infection. However, harvesting of autograft creates a second wound
in the healthy tissue, a donor wound. This open wound increases the
risk of infection and fluid/electrolyte imbalance. Repeated conventional
harvests of autograft from a donor wound site can result in contour
defects or scarring. Optimizing the healing of both main wounds and
donor wounds becomes a later goal of patient management and the
development of different surgical dressings, which can be used based on
the principle of phase-adapted wound healing.
Most recently,
developed wound dressings are in use only as temporary dressings because
of their synthetic or chemical components, limited persistence on the
wound surface, and foreign body character.
Primary closure versus second-intention treatment of skin punch biopsy sites was evaluated in a randomized trial.
[1] Punch
biopsy sites healed by second intention appear at least as good as
biopsy sites closed primarily with sutures. Volunteers preferred
suturing for 8-mm biopsy sites and had no preference for 4-mm sites.
Elimination of suturing of punch biopsy wounds results in personnel
efficiency and economic savings for both patients and medical
institutions.
The wounds had been dressed with petroleum jelly
under an occlusive dressing that consisted of gauze covered by a
transparent dressing (Tegaderm; 3M, St Paul, Minn) and were left in
place for 3 days. After that time, the gel foam was removed from the
second-intention site and both biopsy sites were cleansed with water to
remove any exudate. Then, an occlusive transparent dressing was
reapplied to both sites. After this initial dressing change, dressings
were changed weekly or more often at the volunteers' discretion until
the biopsy sites were completely healed or reepithelialized. Efficient
wound dressings can be important for both small and large wounds.
Some of the currently available surgical dressings used in dermatologic and dermatosurgical practice are discussed.