wound healing principles

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Across
  1. 1. slowest healers, poor perfusion, and granulation
  2. 6. when wounded skin goes back to 100% strength
  3. 7. fastest healers, strong contraction and good granulation
  4. 9. wound closure that is done on wounds that: are severely contaminated/infected, have necrosis or foreign material; done AFTER healthy granulation bed has formed.
  5. 12. this is a stage of wound healing that includes fibrin production, vasoconstriction, platelet adherence, and activation
  6. 15. stage of wound healing with neutrophils then monocytes and later macrophages.
  7. 16. proliferation cells that close the wound
  8. 17. proliferation cells that make collagen
  9. 20. type of closure that is done PREGRANULATION 3-5days after wound
  10. 21. when post-op wound has 70-80% of strength
  11. 22. develop proud flesh, and have poor distal limb healing
  12. 24. when post-op wound has 25% strength
Down
  1. 2. when post-op wound has 5-10% of strength
  2. 3. healing through contraction and epithelialization, and w/o sx intervention, used for large unsealable wounds, infected wounds, and farm castrations
  3. 4. mexican hairless dogs and female duroc pigs are prone to...
  4. 5. neutrophilic bacterial killing, collagen production and modification, and capilary growth all require...
  5. 8. heal mostly via epithelialization, have little contraction and more scarring
  6. 10. length of differentiation part of proliferation
  7. 11. length of inflammation stage
  8. 13. this is a sage in wound healing where there is wound contraction and epithelization
  9. 14. crosslinking and reorienting of collagen
  10. 18. maturation cells
  11. 19. type of closure that is done immediately on fresh wounds with no gap
  12. 23. heal better than horses