Amount of tissue to be debrided
A factor that will influence the choice
of debridement method is the amount
of non-viable tissue to be removed.
If a large amount of non-viable tissue
is present, serial debridement may
be indicated. However, if the non-
viable tissue is placing the individual
at risk of a systemic infection, the
consequences of not immediately
debriding the tissue may be
catastrophic and an urgent surgical
referral is necessary (Young, 2011).
Hyperkeratosis
Hyperkeratosis is the presence of dry
scales found on the surrounding skin
of patients with venous leg ulcers.
A common way of removing this is
soaking the leg in a bucket of water
containing an emollient, followed by the
application of a variety of treatments,
including paste bandages, hydrocolloid
dressings and wiping with gauze. The
time taken to complete this procedure
can range from 10–30 minutes.
The disadvantages of these methods
are the time taken to complete the
procedure and the potential for
cross infection and trauma. There
is no standard practice for dealing
with hyperkeratosis and the current
methods are not ideal, therefore, there
is the potential to develop a more
patient and nurse-friendly method of
de-scaling the legs (Young, 2011).
Clinicians cannot assess a wound
properly until they have removed all
necrotic devitalised tissue (Haycocks
and Chadwick, 2012). This is extremely
important in tissue viability when
trying to accurately establish the stage/
category of pressure ulcers (Stephen-
Haynes and Callaghan, 2012).
Method
A clear understanding of the need
for debridement and available
options is necessary for the
clinician to be able to make the
appropriate choice of debridement
technique.
Unlike acute wounds, which usually
only require debridement once if
at all, chronic wounds may require
repeated maintenance debridement
(EWMA, 2004).
Therefore, the choice of debridement
technique is a risk assessment process
that takes into account the following
factors:
8
Safety
8
Patient choice
8
The amount of devitalised tissue
to be removed
8
The environment in which the
debridement will be undertaken
8
The availability of debriding
equipment
8
The time/speed that is required to
remove the devitalised tissue
8
The pain caused during the
debridement process
8
The skill and knowledge of
the person undertaking the
debridement (Young, 2011).
The practitioner, in conjunction
with the patient, should set short-
and long-term objectives for the
debridement process. The setting of
debridement objectives should lead
to the development of a debridement
treatment plan (Gray et al, 2011).
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