Hypergranulation : Exploring possible management options

Vuolo, J. (2010) Hypergranulation : Exploring possible management options. British Journal of Nursing, 19 (6 SUPP). S4-S8. ISSN 0966-0461
Copy

Hypergranulation (or overgranulation) is an excess of granulation tissue beyond the amount required to replace the tissue deficit incurred as a result of skin injury or wounding. An infrequent but not rare consequence of wounding, the dearth of reliable evidence on the subject of hypergranulation has led to widely varying practices over time, including some which cause pain or discomfort and some which may further impair healing. However, despite a relatively poor evidence base, it is possible to ascertain that clinicians recognize different types of hypergranulation tissue in practice and that a variety of factors contribute to their development. Coupled with an understanding of normal healing processes, this differentiation of types and identification of contributory factors goes some way toward identifying effective treatment pathways and justifying treatment decisions, one of which includes adopting a wait and see approach.


picture_as_pdf
904021.pdf
subject
Submitted Version

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core METS OpenURL ContextObject RIOXX2 XML HTML Citation OpenURL ContextObject in Span MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML ASCII Citation MODS
Export

Downloads