Wound Classification for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Included In This Lesson
Outline
Wound Classification
Definition/Etiology:
- Class 1, Clean
- Not actively infected
- Not from penetrating trauma
- No entry to GI/GU/resp tracts
- Wound closed primarily
- Class 2, Clean Contaminated
- GI/GU/Resp tract entered
- Evidence of contamination
- Class 3, Contaminated
- Trauma/open wound
- GI contents spillage
- Acute Inflammation present
- Break in sterile technique
- Class 4, Dirty, infected
- Active infection/gangrene/necrosis
Considerations:
- Wound class may delay surgical timing
- Acute appy-wait if possible
- Infected joint-avoid implants
- Infected implants= bad bad
- Wound classes often used for clinical order sets
- 2+ consider broad preoperative abx
- 3+ attempt to isolate organism and targeted abx (e-coli?, MRSA?)
- Consider sterile environment requirements
- Infected washout in ER? (4, OK for bedside)
- Wound class may change
Nurse’s Role:
- Documentation!
- Facility guidance per wound class
- If applicable
- Cultures wherever possible
- Patient education pre and post
- Antibiotic stewardship!
Pitfalls:
- Combo cases
- Field is at highest level
- (Nexplanon removal, hysteroscopy = class 2)
- Separate fields possible!
- Clean -> dirty
- Cannot go dirty -> clean
- Regown!
- Light handles!
- Consider need for 2 cautery
- Field is at highest level
Examples:
- Open ended question examples
- EGD? (2)
- Closed femur fracture (1)
- Percutaneous nephro tube (2)
- Acute appy (3)
- Chronic gallbladder? (2)
- Oral abscess and wisdom teeth extraction: cultures positive (4)
Linchpins (Key Points):
- Wound classes can change during surgery
- Identifies the level of infectious risk
- Often guides treatment decisions
Transcript
References
- Association of periOperative Registered Nurses. (2022). Guidelines for Perioperative Practice (2022 ed.).
- Will have picture reference