EDEMA AND COMPRESSION IN WOUND CARE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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EDEMA AND COMPRESSION IN WOUND CARE

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Leg elevation ... Rewrap if it telescopes down the leg. ... Not recommended for patients with extensive leg ulcers or circumferential wounds. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EDEMA AND COMPRESSION IN WOUND CARE


1
EDEMA AND COMPRESSIONIN WOUND CARE
  • University of Washington
  • Doctor of Physical Therapy Program
  • June 24 and 26, 2008
  • Kathleen L. Allen, PT, DPT

2
Edema and compression in wound care
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Understand potential etiologies of edema.
  • Be familiar with indications, precautions, and
    contraindications for treatment with compression.
  • Be able to describe options for managing edema.
  • Be able to perform hands-on four-layer
    compression bandaging.

3
Edema and compression in wound care
  • Edema dynamic insufficiency, not mechanical.
  • Swelling of the interstitial tissues decreases
    the cellular response and removal of cellular
    debris.
  • Compression facilitates movement of the excess
    fluid from the lower extremities.
  • Venous disease occurs in 1 of the general
    population, 3.5 over 65 years of age.

4
Edema
  • Etiologies of edema
  • Chronic venous insufficiency.
  • Cardiac disease (manage with the cardiologist).
  • Pelvic tumors.
  • Morbid obesity (abdomen restricts venous and
    lymphatic return).
  • Medications (e.g., antihypertensive agents).
  • Increased interstitial volume (cirrhosis, renal
    failure).

5
Edema measurement
  • Measure edema by depth of pitting
  • 1 Mild 0 to ¼ pitting
  • 2 Moderate ¼ to ½ pitting
  • 3 Severe ½ to 1 pitting
  • 4 Very severe 1 pitting
  • Pitting can also be measured by the time it takes
    for the skin deformation to normalize.

6
Interventions for edema
  • Leg elevation.
  • Exercise.
  • Compression.
  • Diuretics should never be used as a primary
    treatment for edema.
  • MANAGEMENT OF EDEMA REQUIRES AN INVESTMENT OF
    TIME, ENERGY, AND DEDICATION BY THE PATIENT, WITH
    MULTIPLE LIFESTYLE ADJUSTMENTS.

7
Interventions for edema
  • Leg elevation
  • Elevate legs above the level of the heart 20 to
    30 minutes at a time for a total of 2 hours per
    day.
  • OK to exercise feet and ankles while elevating
    legs.
  • Contraindications arterial occlusive disease,
    CHF, morbid obesity, other medical conditions
    which preclude lying horizontal.
  • Exercise
  • Work the calf muscle pump while using a
    compression garment or wrap.

8
Interventions for edema
  • Compression includes
  • Short- and long-stretch bandages.
  • Tubular bandages.
  • Paste bandages (Unna boot).
  • Graduated compression stockings.
  • Intermittent sequential compression devices.

9
Compression
  • Questions to ask before applying compression
  • Is the ABI above 0.8?
  • Does the patient have an allergy to latex?
  • Does the patient need edema reduction before
    being fitted for permanent compression garments?
    Should insurance authorization be initiated?
  • Does the patient have sufficient ROM to don the
    garments? Will a caregiver need to be trained?
  • Is the patient committed to the process?

10
Classes of compression
  • Class 1 14-18 mmHg
  • Class 2 18-24 mmHg
  • Class 3 25-35 mmHg
  • Class 4 40-50 mmHg
  • Non-ambulatory patients or those not able to work
    the calf muscles need 16-18 mmHg pressure.
  • Dependent edema requires low compression at 18-24
    mmHg.
  • Venous insufficiency requires 24-35 mmHg (some
    say 40 mmHg, if patient is able to walk) in OTC
    or custom compression stockings or four-layer
    bandages.

11
Compression hints
  • Check the ABI!
  • Choose the compression option that suits the
    degree of exudate.
  • Increase compression if edema persists with lower
    compression, or with an chronic ulcer of 6
    months duration.
  • Be careful of uneven tension causing skin
    irritation and/or ulcerations.
  • Apply compression within 20 minutes of waking.

12
Compression options
  • Elastic wraps
  • Long-stretch bandages are best simply to secure a
    bandage (or with burn patients at HMC).
  • Short-stretch bandages are recommended, so
    sufficient external compression isi applied to
    cause movement of excess fluid.
  • Tubular bandages for light compression - Should
    be tapered at the ankle otherwise, compression
    is higher at the calf than at the ankle. Tubular
    bandages come in many sizes. Demo of
    measurement.

13
Compression options
  • Paste bandages
  • Developed in the 1880s by Dr. Unna
  • Fine gauze impregnated with zinc oxide, gelatin,
    glycerine, (?) calamine.
  • As the boot dries and stiffens, the leg cannot
    continue to swell.
  • Apply it without tension or wrinkles (cut and
    pleat).
  • If too tight after a period of activity, elevate
    legs at least 30 minutes.

14
Compression options
  • Paste bandages (cont.)
  • Application of a compression wrap over the boot
    will increase compression and protect clothing.
  • Usually changed every 4 to 7 days.
  • Shower if able to cover with plastic and tape.
  • Ownership of care is placed on the provider.
  • Contraindications Is the patient allergic to
    any ingredients? Is the ABI below 0.8? Does the
    patient have poor personal hygiene, frail/friable
    skin, active cellulitis, or infected ulcers?

15
Compression options
  • Four-layer bandages (plus wound contact layer)
  • Provide 40 mmHg pressure at ankle, 17 at calf.
  • Provide graduated, sustained compression with
    layers providing protection, padding, and
    compression.
  • Layering anchors the wrap, stays in place longer.
  • Patient should not report toe numbness/tingling.
  • PT should be able to place one finger under the
    bandage.

16
Compression options
  • Four-layer bandages (cont.)
  • Rewrap if it telescopes down the leg.
  • Change the bandages every 4 to 7 days, more
    frequently if heavy exudate is present.
  • Inspect the skin after removing wrap, document.
  • Patient should not report severe pain, excessive
    drainage, or foul odor.
  • Ownership of care is placed on the provider.

17
Compression options
  • Compression pump
  • Divided into multiple chambers, inflating first
    at ankle. Each successive chamber inflates to a
    lesser degree.
  • Used 1 to 2 hours daily, daytime use only.
  • Will require LE compression when not on the pump.
  • Strict Medicare guidelines.
  • Contraindications Untreated CHF, cellulitis,
    active wound infection, sleeves that do not fit.

18
Compression options
  • Compression stockings
  • Multiple manufacturers, OTC and custom. Examine
    examples and various compression levels.
  • Measure early in the a.m. or after pumping for 1
    to 2 hours. Or refer to compression specialist
    when PT deems it appropriate following bandaging.
  • Depending on compression level, may be difficult
    to don. Demo of the butler. Make sure there
    are no wrinkles.

19
Compression options
  • Compression stockings (cont.)
  • May be removed for sleeping.
  • Not recommended for patients with extensive leg
    ulcers or circumferential wounds.
  • Order two pairs at a time -- for laundering.
  • Patient compliance is a high priority, especially
    in the summer! Patients should not arrive with
    their stockings in a bag.
  • Not universally covered by insurance, certainly
    not by Medicare.

20
Compression options
  • Compression stockings (cont.)
  • Contraindications ABI at or below 0.8, allergy
    to latex (choose the appropriate brand), plus the
    other usual contraindications for compression.

21
Criteria for referral back to provider
  • Arterial occlusive disease (pain and calf
    cramping with walking, absent peripheral pulses,
    localized lack of hair growth, thickening of
    toenails, delayed capillary refill).
  • Persistent edema for 1 month s/p compression
    wrapping, leg elevations, and exercise.
  • New ulcerations or enlargement of existing
    ulcer(s).
  • Pain with leg elevation and exercise.

22
Patient education in self-care
  • Patient needs to acknowledge that edema
    management is owned by the patient, not the
    practitioner.
  • If compliance is questionable, consider a
    contract.
  • If initially using paste bandages and four-layer
    wraps, attempt to move the patient into an
    increased role in their own care as soon as
    feasible.
  • Now, lets get to wrapping .
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