N352 Health and Illness Tissue Integrity Definitions
Serosanguineous
clear and blood tinged
Tendon
gleaming yellow or white, shiny when healthy, strong fibrous tissue, attaches muscle to bone
Hyper granulation tissue
granulation tissue forms above the surface of the surrounding epithelium. Delays epithelialization
Pressure ulcers
have rounded, crater-like shapes with regular edges. Usually develop over a bony prominence and are therefore circular in shape, will however take on the shape of the object that caused the pressure. Deep pressure ulcers usually have a dark-red wound base and do not bleed easily. The ulcer is analogous to an iceberg; it has a small visible surface with a more extensive unknown base.
Sanguineous exudates
large amounts of red blood cells
Exudates
material such as fluid and dead phagocytic cells that has escaped from the blood vessels.
Muscle
pink to dark red, firm, highly vascular
Deep tissue injury
purple or maroon localized area of discolored intact skin or blood-filled blister due to damage of underlying soft tissue from pressure and/or shear. The area may be preceded by tissue that is painful, firm, mushy, boggy, warmer or cooler as compared to adjacent tissue.
Staging of pressure ulcers
assessment system that classifies pressure ulcers based on anatomic depth of soft tissue damage. Developed by the National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP) as method of communication between health care providers. The staging system was originally developed to guide clinical description of the depth of tissue destruction that occurs with pressure ulcers. Updated in February 2007.
Granulation tissue
beefy deep pink or red, irregular surface, puffy or mounded bubbly appearance. Seen in wound bed of healing full thickness wounds. Clean non-granulating tissue - deep pink or red and smooth (non-granular) or striated (when muscle fibers are exposed)
Eschar
black brown dry non-viable( necrotic) tissue, usually darker in color, thicker, hard
Epithelial tissue
deep pink to pearly pink, light purple or lavender in color; in full-thickness wounds, new epithelial tissue migrates from the wound edges to gradually cover the granulation tissue
Necrotic tissue
defines all dead and avascular tissue
Partial Thickness
destruction of epidermis and dermis
Full Thickness
destruction of epidermis, dermis, subcutaneous and or deeper
Secondary intention healing
edges cannot or should not be approximated, involves extensive tissue loss.
Serous exudates
straw colored exudates
Purulent exudates
thick, opaque or milky appearance (pus)
Primary intention healing
tissue surfaces are well approximated and there is minimal or no tissue loss.
Tertiary intention healing
wound is left open for 3-5 days to allow edema or infection to resolve
Slough
yellow green grey, non-viable (necrotic) tissue, usually lighter in color thinner, wet stringy