WEB WOC Wound Care 2026 REAL EXAM QUESTIONS
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Chapter 1 Introduction to Surgical Te... AORN Periop 101 Surgical Assistant Certification Exa... Or
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Practice questions for this set
Learn 1 /7 Study with Learn
a type of non-instrumental debridement done by using damp gauze in the wound bed
that is allowed to dry out to trap tissue which is then pulled off during dressing changes
Choose an answer
1 enzymatic debridement by protease cream 2 biological debridement by honey infusion
mechanical debridement by wet-to-dry
3 chemical debridement by acid application 4
dressing
Don't know?
Terms in this set (143)
, TIMERS Tissue management
Inflammation/infection control
Moisture balance
Edge/epithelial advancement
Regeneration/repair of tissue
Social/patient related factors
Framework used to provide an optimal physiologic TIMERS
wound environment that is conducive to healing
Goal of tissue management to remove non-viable, necrotic tissue as well as non-functional tissue such as
hypergranulation
goal of inflammation or infection control eliminate infection and control bioburden
goal of moisture balance not too wet and not too dry
provide moist wound therapy, absorb excess drainage, control odor, fill dead
space, control swelling, protect periwound
goal of epithelial/edge advancement keep wound edged open, address epibole and undermining, remove callous,
protect periwound skin
goal of regeneration/repair of tissue cellular products, tissue based products, advanced therapies such as
hyperbaric treatment of NPWT
goal of social/patient related factors develop a patient-centers POC, patient engagement, holistic assessment
why use debridement? to remove necrotic tissue or debris, remove and reduce biofilm, remove
infected tissues, in palliative care to control odor, to facilitate wound
visualization, in chronic wounds to convert to acute wound to promote healing
autolytic debridement a type of non-instrumental debridement that uses the body's own WBCs,
enzymes, and moisture to re-hydrate, soften, and liquify hard eschar and
slough
benefits of autolytic debridement painless, easily done with moisture retentive dressings, aides in combination
debridement methods
disadvantages of autolytic debridement takes times, may be aesthetically displeasing to the patient if using a
transparent dressing
contraindications to autolytic debridement neutropenic patients, those with diabetes mellitus (higher risk for infection)
surfactant debridement a type of non-instrumental debridement that uses concentrated nonionic
surfactant dressings (CSDs) which can soften and loosen wound debris,
breakdown biofilms, and prevent redevelopment of biofilms
|MOST TESTED QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS
|100% ACCURATE|GET IT RIGHT!!
Save
Students also studied
Chapter 1 Introduction to Surgical Te... AORN Periop 101 Surgical Assistant Certification Exa... Or
Teacher 6 terms Teacher 57 terms Teacher 122 terms Te
Zippie_Mburu Preview Cliff_Rosasi7 Preview Blueish_Code Preview
Practice questions for this set
Learn 1 /7 Study with Learn
a type of non-instrumental debridement done by using damp gauze in the wound bed
that is allowed to dry out to trap tissue which is then pulled off during dressing changes
Choose an answer
1 enzymatic debridement by protease cream 2 biological debridement by honey infusion
mechanical debridement by wet-to-dry
3 chemical debridement by acid application 4
dressing
Don't know?
Terms in this set (143)
, TIMERS Tissue management
Inflammation/infection control
Moisture balance
Edge/epithelial advancement
Regeneration/repair of tissue
Social/patient related factors
Framework used to provide an optimal physiologic TIMERS
wound environment that is conducive to healing
Goal of tissue management to remove non-viable, necrotic tissue as well as non-functional tissue such as
hypergranulation
goal of inflammation or infection control eliminate infection and control bioburden
goal of moisture balance not too wet and not too dry
provide moist wound therapy, absorb excess drainage, control odor, fill dead
space, control swelling, protect periwound
goal of epithelial/edge advancement keep wound edged open, address epibole and undermining, remove callous,
protect periwound skin
goal of regeneration/repair of tissue cellular products, tissue based products, advanced therapies such as
hyperbaric treatment of NPWT
goal of social/patient related factors develop a patient-centers POC, patient engagement, holistic assessment
why use debridement? to remove necrotic tissue or debris, remove and reduce biofilm, remove
infected tissues, in palliative care to control odor, to facilitate wound
visualization, in chronic wounds to convert to acute wound to promote healing
autolytic debridement a type of non-instrumental debridement that uses the body's own WBCs,
enzymes, and moisture to re-hydrate, soften, and liquify hard eschar and
slough
benefits of autolytic debridement painless, easily done with moisture retentive dressings, aides in combination
debridement methods
disadvantages of autolytic debridement takes times, may be aesthetically displeasing to the patient if using a
transparent dressing
contraindications to autolytic debridement neutropenic patients, those with diabetes mellitus (higher risk for infection)
surfactant debridement a type of non-instrumental debridement that uses concentrated nonionic
surfactant dressings (CSDs) which can soften and loosen wound debris,
breakdown biofilms, and prevent redevelopment of biofilms