Cargando…

Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury

Pressure ulcers are a lifelong, serious complication of spinal cord injury. They have the potential to interfere with physical, psychological, and social well-being and to impact overall quality of life. Prevention Strategies: 1. Implementing pressure ulcer prevention strategies as part of the compr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Karam Pazhouh, Fereshteh, Parvaz, Nasrin, Saeidi Borojeni, Hamid Reza, Mahvar, Tayebeh, Alimoradi, Zhaleh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3571616/
_version_ 1782259192418009088
author Karam Pazhouh, Fereshteh
Parvaz, Nasrin
Saeidi Borojeni, Hamid Reza
Mahvar, Tayebeh
Alimoradi, Zhaleh
author_facet Karam Pazhouh, Fereshteh
Parvaz, Nasrin
Saeidi Borojeni, Hamid Reza
Mahvar, Tayebeh
Alimoradi, Zhaleh
author_sort Karam Pazhouh, Fereshteh
collection PubMed
description Pressure ulcers are a lifelong, serious complication of spinal cord injury. They have the potential to interfere with physical, psychological, and social well-being and to impact overall quality of life. Prevention Strategies: 1. Implementing pressure ulcer prevention strategies as part of the comprehensive management of acute SCI and reviewing all aspects of risk when determining prevention strategies. - Avoiding prolonged positional immobilization whenever possible. 2. Conducting daily comprehensive visual and tactile skin inspections, with particular attention to the regions most vulnerable to pressure ulcer development. 3. Turning or repositioning individuals with SCI initially every 2 hours in the acute and rehabilitation phases if the medical condition allows. 4. Evaluating the individual and his/her support environment for optimal maintenance of skin integrity. 5. Providing an individually prescribed wheelchair and pressure-reducing seating system. 6. Implementing an ongoing exercise regimen for the medically stable SCI individual to promote maintenance of skin integrity, improve cardiovascular e, and prevent fatigue and deconditioning. 7. Providing individuals with SCI, their families, significant others, on effective strategies for the prevention and treatment of pressure ulcers. 8. Assessing nutritional status of all SCI individuals on admission and as needed, based on medical status, including: 9. Providing adequate nutritional intake to meet the individual’s needs, especially: - Calories (or Energy) - Protein - Micronutrients (zinc, vitamin C, vitamin A, and vitamin E) - Fluids 10. Implementing aggressive nutritional support measures if dietary intake is inadequate or if an individual is nutritionally compromised. Treatment: Nonsurgical: - Cleansing - Debridement - Dressings - Electrical stimulation - Reassessment Surgical: - Excising of ulcer, surrounding scar, bursa, soft tissue calcification, and underlying necrotic or infected bone - Filling dead space, enhancing vascularity of the healing wound, and distributing pressure off the bone - Resurfacing with a large regional pedicle flap, with suture line away from the area of direct pressure, and one that does not encroach on adjacent flap territories - Preserving options for future potential break-downs KEYWORDS: Prevention, Pressure ulcers, Spinal Cord Injury
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3571616
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-35716162013-03-19 Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury Karam Pazhouh, Fereshteh Parvaz, Nasrin Saeidi Borojeni, Hamid Reza Mahvar, Tayebeh Alimoradi, Zhaleh J Inj Violence Res Poster Presentation Pressure ulcers are a lifelong, serious complication of spinal cord injury. They have the potential to interfere with physical, psychological, and social well-being and to impact overall quality of life. Prevention Strategies: 1. Implementing pressure ulcer prevention strategies as part of the comprehensive management of acute SCI and reviewing all aspects of risk when determining prevention strategies. - Avoiding prolonged positional immobilization whenever possible. 2. Conducting daily comprehensive visual and tactile skin inspections, with particular attention to the regions most vulnerable to pressure ulcer development. 3. Turning or repositioning individuals with SCI initially every 2 hours in the acute and rehabilitation phases if the medical condition allows. 4. Evaluating the individual and his/her support environment for optimal maintenance of skin integrity. 5. Providing an individually prescribed wheelchair and pressure-reducing seating system. 6. Implementing an ongoing exercise regimen for the medically stable SCI individual to promote maintenance of skin integrity, improve cardiovascular e, and prevent fatigue and deconditioning. 7. Providing individuals with SCI, their families, significant others, on effective strategies for the prevention and treatment of pressure ulcers. 8. Assessing nutritional status of all SCI individuals on admission and as needed, based on medical status, including: 9. Providing adequate nutritional intake to meet the individual’s needs, especially: - Calories (or Energy) - Protein - Micronutrients (zinc, vitamin C, vitamin A, and vitamin E) - Fluids 10. Implementing aggressive nutritional support measures if dietary intake is inadequate or if an individual is nutritionally compromised. Treatment: Nonsurgical: - Cleansing - Debridement - Dressings - Electrical stimulation - Reassessment Surgical: - Excising of ulcer, surrounding scar, bursa, soft tissue calcification, and underlying necrotic or infected bone - Filling dead space, enhancing vascularity of the healing wound, and distributing pressure off the bone - Resurfacing with a large regional pedicle flap, with suture line away from the area of direct pressure, and one that does not encroach on adjacent flap territories - Preserving options for future potential break-downs KEYWORDS: Prevention, Pressure ulcers, Spinal Cord Injury Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences 2012-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3571616/ Text en Copyright © 2012, KUMS http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Poster Presentation
Karam Pazhouh, Fereshteh
Parvaz, Nasrin
Saeidi Borojeni, Hamid Reza
Mahvar, Tayebeh
Alimoradi, Zhaleh
Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
title Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
title_full Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
title_fullStr Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
title_full_unstemmed Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
title_short Prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
title_sort prevention of pressure ulcers in spinal cord injury
topic Poster Presentation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3571616/
work_keys_str_mv AT karampazhouhfereshteh preventionofpressureulcersinspinalcordinjury
AT parvaznasrin preventionofpressureulcersinspinalcordinjury
AT saeidiborojenihamidreza preventionofpressureulcersinspinalcordinjury
AT mahvartayebeh preventionofpressureulcersinspinalcordinjury
AT alimoradizhaleh preventionofpressureulcersinspinalcordinjury