Poor circulation due to damage to arteries or veins
Nerve damage
Bone infection
Being inactive or immobile
Weak immune system
Poor nutrition
Excess alcohol use
Smoking
Having a foreign body (such as a piece of wood or broken glass) in the wound
Non-healing wounds may take months to heal. Surgery may be performed to speed up healing. Some wounds never heal completely.
Your Wound Care Team
When you go to a wound clinic, you will work with a team of health care providers trained in wound care. Your team may include:
Providers who oversee your care
Nurses who clean and dress your wound and teach you how to care for it at home
Physical therapists who help with wound care and work with you to help you stay mobile
Your providers will also keep your primary care provider up to date on your progress and treatment.
What to Expect at a Wound Care Center
Your wound care team will:
Examine and measure your wound
Check the blood flow in the area around the wound
Determine why it's not healing
Create a treatment plan
Treatment goals include:
Healing the wound
Preventing the wound from getting worse or becoming infected
Preventing limb loss
Preventing new wounds from occurring or old wounds from coming back
Helping you stay mobile
In order to treat your wound, your provider will clean the wound and apply a dressing. You also may have other types of treatment to help it heal.
Debridement
Debridement is the process of removing dead skin and tissue. This tissue must be removed to help your wound heal. There are many ways to do this. You may need to have general anesthesia (asleep and pain-free) for debridement of a large wound.
Surgical debridement uses a scalpel, scissors, or other sharp tools. During the procedure, your provider will:
Clean the skin around the wound
Probe the wound to see how deep it is
Cut away the dead tissue
Clean the wound
Your wound may seem bigger and deeper after debridement. The area will be red or pink in color and look like fresh meat.
Other ways to remove dead or infected tissue are to:
Sit or place your limb in a whirlpool bath.
Use a syringe to wash away dead tissue.
Apply wet-to-dry dressings to the area. A wet dressing is applied to the wound and allowed to dry. As it dries, it absorbs some of the dead tissue. The dressing may be wet again and then gently pulled off along with dead tissue.
Put special chemicals, called enzymes, on your wound. These dissolve dead tissue from the wound.
After the wound is clean, your provider will apply a dressing to keep the wound moist, which promotes healing, and help prevent infection. There are many different types of dressings, including:
Gels
Foams
Gauze
Films
Your provider may use one or multiple types of dressings as your wound heals.
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy
Depending on the type of wound, your provider may recommend hyperbaric oxygen therapy. Oxygen is important for healing.
During this treatment, you sit inside a special chamber. The air pressure inside the chamber is about two and a half times greater than the normal pressure in the atmosphere. This pressure helps your blood carry more oxygen to organs and tissues in your body. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can help some wounds heal faster.
Other Treatments
Your providers may recommend other types of treatment, including:
Compression stockings -- tight-fitting stockings or wraps that improve blood flow in veins, reduce swelling, and help with healing.
Ultrasound -- using sound waves to aid healing.
Artificial skin -- a synthetic skin that covers the wound for days at a time as it heals.
Negative pressure therapy -- pulling the air out of a closed dressing, creating a vacuum. The negative pressure improves blood flow and pulls out excess fluid.
Growth factor therapy -- materials produced by the body that help wound-healing cells grow.
Skin grafts -- a surgeon removes part of your skin and places it over your wound.
You will receive treatment at the wound center every week or more often, depending on your treatment plan.
Follow-up Care
Your providers will give you instructions on caring for your wound at home in between visits. Depending on your needs, you may also receive help with:
Healthy eating
Diabetes care
Smoking cessation
Pain management
Physical therapy
When to Call Your Doctor
You should contact your provider if you notice signs of infection, such as:
Redness
Swelling
Pus or bleeding from the wound
Pain that gets worse
Fever
Chills
References
de Leon J, Bohn GA, DiDomenico L, et al. Wound care centers: critical thinking and treatment strategies for wounds. Wounds. 2016;28(10):S1-S23. PMID: 28682298 pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28682298/.
Woelfel SL, Armstrong DG, Shin L. Wound care. In: Sidawy AN, Perler BA, eds. Rutherford's Vascular Surgery and Endovascular Therapy. 10th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2023:chap 118.
Review Date:
4/9/2024
Reviewed By:
Frank D. Brodkey, MD, FCCM, Associate Professor, Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.