Pressure Injury

Pictures of pressure injuries (formerly pressure ulcers) and disease information have been excerpted from VisualDx clinical decision support system as a public health service. Additional information, including symptoms, diagnostic pearls, differential diagnosis, best tests, and management pearls, is available in VisualDx.

Full Clinical Write-up

Synopsis

A pressure injury results when there is localized damage to the skin and underlying tissue as a result of compression between a bony prominence and an external surface. Damage is caused by the forces of pressure, shear, and friction acting individually or in combination with each other. Pressure injuries, previously termed as decubitus ulcers, are also commonly referred to as pressure sores and bed sores. Common sites for pressure injury formation are the sacrum, over the ischial tuberosity, the trochanter, and the calcaneus. Other locations are the elbow, ankle, scapula, and the occiput. However, the most common sites are the sacrum and the heels. Pressure injuries affect from 1.5-3 million people in the US, at an annual cost of approximately 5 billion dollars.

Pressure injuries occur more commonly in certain subsets of patients, such as the elderly, patients who have had surgery for hip fracture, and patients with spinal cord injury. Pressure injuries are also more common in patients who are from nursing homes and assisted living facilities or who are otherwise hospitalized.

Factors promoting pressure injury formation include the following:

  • Pressure – The primary contributive factor leading to formation of ulcers. The length of time that high pressures are sustained is just as important as the degree of pressure. Thus, constantly relieving pressure prevents tissue damage or tissue death.
  • Friction – Occurs when two surfaces resist movement at their interface, resulting in damage to superficial layers of skin. The epidermis is abraded, and intraepidermal blisters may result that lead to superficial skin erosions, not unlike a mild burn. This can occur when a patient is dragged across a bed sheet (referred to as a sheet burn) or when a patient wears a badly fitting prosthetic device.
  • Shearing Forces – Generated by the motion of bone and subcutaneous tissue relative to the skin. Gravity acts to pull the body down, which is prevented from moving due to friction (as seen when the head of the bed is raised to more than 30 degrees or when a seated patient slides down a chair). Even though the body is being pulled down or forward, the skin is pinned in its place. This involves the interplay of gravity and friction to propagate these shearing forces. Shear is responsible for a large amount of the damage associated with pressure injuries.
  • Moisture – Moist surfaces predispose to ulcer formation in two ways: First, moisture increases the effects of pressure, friction, and shear on the skin by decreasing its resistance to these forces and secondly by causing maceration of the skin, thereby increasing the incidence of ulcer formation fivefold. Conditions leading to excess moisture may arise due to perspiration, urinary or fecal incontinence, or leakage from a wound site.

Pressure injuries are classified according to the extent of tissue damage, per the National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP):

  • Stage 1: Skin is intact with an area of non-blanching erythema. This is usually over a bony prominence.
  • Stage 2: Partial thickness skin loss with loss of the epidermis and some of the dermis. It appears as a shallow ulcer with a red-pink color. No slough or necrotic tissue is present in the base. It may also appear as an enclosed or open serum-filled blister.
  • Stage 3: Full thickness loss of skin with the epidermis and dermis gone and damage to or necrosis of subcutaneous tissues. Damage extends down to but not through the underlying fascia. Subcutaneous fat may be visible, but muscle, tendon, or bone is not seen. Slough may be present but does not hinder estimation of the extent of tissue loss. Tunneling or undermining may be present.
  • Stage 4: Full thickness loss of skin with extensive destruction, tissue necrosis, and damage to bone, muscle, or other supporting structures that are exposed.
  • Deep tissue pressure injury: Area of localized, discolored intact skin that is purple or maroon-red in color. It may also appear as a blood-filled blister resulting from damage to underlying soft tissue. Preceding skin changes may include skin that is painful, firm, boggy, or that has a different temperature as compared to the surrounding skin.
  • Unstageable: Full tissue thickness loss in which the base of the ulcer is covered by slough or an eschar and, therefore, the true depth of the damage cannot be estimated until these are removed.

The NPUAP 2016 updated staging system also includes the following:

  • Medical device-related pressure injury (describes an etiology): Results from the use of devices designed and applied for therapeutic purposes. Injury generally conforms to the pattern or shape of the device. Stage using the staging system.
  • Mucosal membrane pressure injury: Found on mucous membranes with a history of a medical device in use at the location of the injury. Cannot be staged due to anatomy of tissue.

When estimating the depth of pressure injuries for purposes of staging, it is important to keep in mind anatomical location, especially in the case of stage 3 ulcers. Ulcers on the bridge of the nose, ear, occiput, and malleolus do not have subcutaneous tissue and, consequently, will be very shallow (but still graded as stage 3), as compared to a stage 3 ulcer on the sacrum.

Risk factors leading to pressure injury formation are as follows:

  • Limited mobility
  • Malnutrition
  • Anemia
  • Advanced age
  • Fecal or urinary incontinence
  • Smoking
  • Dry skin
  • Altered skin perfusion – Decreased in cases of shock or increased if patient has fluid edema due to overhydration.
  • Acute illness leading to temporary immobility
  • Chronic systemic illness
  • Terminal illness
  • Degenerative neurologic disease
  • Increased weight
  • Sudden decrease in weight
  • Altered mental status
  • Prolonged pressure

Simultaneous treatment with the following medications can also predispose to ulcer formation:

  • Corticosteroids
  • Sedatives
  • Analgesics
  • Anti-hypertensives

When a patient presents with a pressure injury, the following criteria should initially be followed:

  1. Assess and record the stage of the ulcer and the location according to ICD codes.
  2. Carry out an assessment using the Braden or Norton scale. These act as tools for predicting pressure injury risk; this should be done for patients who have not yet developed an ulcer but could be susceptible to one and those who have already developed one. This is an important assessment, as it determines the prevention measures taken and the type of pressure-reducing support surfaces consequently used.
  3. Monitor the progress daily.

ICD codes identifying both the site and stage of the ulcer are needed for complete staging of the pressure injury.

Stage I
Stage II
Stage III
Stage IV
Suspected Deep Tissue Injury
Unstageable

Look For:

When examining the ulcer, look for and record the following:

  • Location on the body
  • Staging of the ulcer
  • Size of the ulcer, including the depth, width, and length in centimeters.
  • Wound bed – Appearance of the wound bed and the type of tissue visible. Observe the tissue color and whether it appears moist. The wound bed color for healthy granulating tissue is beefy-red and cobblestone-like. A red and smooth wound bed is indicative of clean but nongranulating tissue.
  • Wound edges – Look carefully at the edge of the ulcer for evidence of induration, maceration, rolling edges, redness.
  • Skin around the edges of the ulcer – The periwound skin should be assessed for color, texture, temperature, and integrity of the surrounding skin.
  • Presence of undermining, tunneling, sinus tracts – Tunneling is a passage that extends from the wound through to subcutaneous tissue or muscle. Undermining is the destruction of tissue around the edge of the wound.
  • Drainage; exudate – If present, the color and amount.
  • Presence of necrotic tissue
  • Presence or absence of pain
  • Odor, if present or absent

Dark Skin Considerations:
Erythema can be subtle in darker skin and may appear as a slightly different color, or the skin may be slightly darker than normal. Discoloration, warmth, induration, or hardness of skin may be the only signs of a stage 1 pressure injury in people with darker skin tones.

The full text and image collection is available to VisualDx subscribers.

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