Pressure Injuries (Ulcers) for Progressive Care Certified Nurse (PCCN)
Included In This Lesson
Outline
Pressure Injuries (Ulcers)
Definition/Etiology:
- Define with pictures
- Pressure ulcer
- Suspected Deep Tissue Injury
- Shearing
Pathophysiology:
- Pressure points
- Will show picture of common pressure points
Noticing: Assessment & Recognizing Cues:
- Stage 1, Stage 2, and Stage 3 (w/pictures)
- Stage 1-Red, not blanchable (doesn’t break skin)
- Stage 2- Breaks skin through epidermis (see tissue)
- Stage 3- Breaks skin through the dermis (see fat)
Interpreting: Analyzing & Planning:
- Stage 4, and other (w. pictures)
- Stage 4- Breaks skin through fat (see muscle/bone)
- Unstageable- Cannot fully visualize
- Undermining
- Tunneling
Responding: Patient Interventions & Taking Action:
- Prevention
- Nutrition
- Skin hygiene
- Avoid skin trauma
- Supportive devices (e.g. pillows)
- Turning and positioning
Reflecting: Evaluating Patient Outcomes:
- Management
- Dressing changes
- “Cushion” dressing
- Wet-to-dry
- Slough removal
- Sharp debridement
- Necrotic tissue
- Prevent further decline
Linchpins (Key Points):
- What’s at the bottom?- that’s how bad the pressure injury is
- Stage ½ = not broken vs. see tissue
- Stage ¾ = see fat vs. see muscle/bone
- Other = unstageable, undermining, tunneling
- Prevention/ management = prevention measures & dressings
Transcript
References
- Pearson Education Inc. (2015) Nursing: A concept-based approach to learning (2nd. ed.). Pearson.
- Zulkowski, K. (n.d.) Wound classification. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. https://www.ahrq.gov/sites/default/files/wysiwyg/professionals/systems/hospital/pressure_ulcer_prevention/webinars/webinar6_pu_woundassesst.pdf.