Examining and cleaning a wound before closing
Attention
- All dirt, gravel, sand must be taken out of wound before suturing so it heals properly
and doesn’t get infected
- If there is a chance that foreign body could still be in — send for further examination
before closing
- Giving antibiotics is not a substitute for proper cleaning of wounds
- Immunisation status — tetanus
What you need
- Hair clippers
- Sterile dressing pack
- Normal saline for cleaning
- 20mL syringe and 19G needle
- Sterile scissors with pointed ends
- Extra sterile gauze
- 2 pairs sterile gloves (new non-sterile gloves if sterile not available)
What you do
Examine
- Check sensory and motor nerve response before giving local anaesthetic + adrenaline (epinephrine) if wound actively bleeding
- Do not use local anaesthetic + adrenaline (epinephrine) for fingers, toes, penis, nose,
ears
- Look carefully, explore wound and surrounding area for
- Colour, warmth, sensation, movement, swelling
- Size and shape
- Clean, dirty (eg soil, glass)
- Nerve injury
- Damage to major blood vessels
- Tendon injury
- Deep muscle damage
- Bone or joint involvement
Clean
- Procedure may be painful — Give local anaesthetic if needed before cleaning wound
- Clean site and drape with sterile towels
- Use forceps in pack to take out any dirt or debris in and around wound
- Flush wound with 500mL normal saline to wash out (irrigate) wound — use pressure to remove any visible dirt (contaminants)
- If dirty wound — use 20mL syringe and 19G needle to flush with antiseptic (eg povidone-iodine,
chlorhexidine) before closing
- May need to use more than 20mL antiseptic
- If chronic wound — consider specialised wound cleanser
- Put in a gloved finger into the wound to feel for deeper damage and foreign body
- Trim any torn skin edges with sterile scissors — only remove tissue/skin that you
think is so badly damaged that it won’t survive. Take off as little skin as possible
- Trim hair around wound if needed. Do not trim eyebrows (they may not grow back)