Identification of types of wound bed tissue as a percentage and total wound area by planimetry in neuropathic and venous ulcers

Neuropathic and venous leg ulcers are chronic wounds associated with devitalized tissue and recurrent infection. Management should be guided by accurate tissue assessment, including the use of planimetry, which provides tissue types as a percentage of the total wound bed surface area. This innovativ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of vascular nursing 2023-12, Vol.41 (4), p.164-170
Hauptverfasser: Alcântara, Silvia Bottaro Carvalho, de Araújo, Juliano Gonçalves, Santos, Diogo Fernandes, da Silva, Tathiane Ribeiro, Goulart, Isabela Maria Bernardes, Bernardes da Silva, Andrea Mara, Antunes, Douglas Eulálio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Neuropathic and venous leg ulcers are chronic wounds associated with devitalized tissue and recurrent infection. Management should be guided by accurate tissue assessment, including the use of planimetry, which provides tissue types as a percentage of the total wound bed surface area. This innovative study aimed to assess and identify the wound bed tissues, as a percentage, of neuropathic and venous ulcers using digital planimetry, providing support to nurses optimize the management of necrotic tissues and, consequently, to avoid wound infection. This cross-sectional study enrolled 24 patients with chronic wounds who were assessed from January to March 2021 at the Wound Outpatients Clinic. The wound photographs were analyzed using Image J 1.53e and a smartphone with WoundDoc Plus® 2.8.2 via digital planimetry. Statistical analyses were performed using the binomial test, t-test, and Mann-Whitney. Median wound areas (p=0.3263) did not differ between the group with 2 or 3 risk factors for delayed healing (Md: 31.7) and the group with up to 1 risk factor (Md: 5.3). A low exudate level was associated with the up-to-1-risk-factor-for-delayed-healing group (p=0.0405), while a medium level was associated with the two-or-three-risk-factor group (p=0.0247). A heat map displayed the tissue percentages in the wound bed. In the group with 2 or 3 risk factors for delayed healing, 91.7% (11/12) had less than 70% granulation tissue, which was the primary factor for this group (p
ISSN:1062-0303
1532-6578
DOI:10.1016/j.jvn.2023.06.005