| BREAKING
NEWS
NPUAP ANNOUNCES NEW
PRESSURE ULCER DEFINITION AND STAGING
The National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel has redefined
the definition of a pressure ulcer and the stages of pressure
ulcers, including the original 4 stages and adding 2 stages
on deep tissue injury and unstageable pressure ulcers. This
work is the culmination of over 5 years of work beginning
with the identification of deep tissue injury in 2001.
Pressure
Ulcer Definition
A pressure ulcer is localized injury to the skin and/or
underlying tissue usually over a bony prominence, as a result
of pressure, or pressure in combination with shear and/or
friction.
A number of contributing or confounding factors are
also associated with pressure ulcers; the significance of
these factors is yet to be elucidated.
Pressure Ulcer Stages
Suspected
Deep Tissue Injury:
Purple or maroon localized area of discolored intact skin
or blood-filled blister due to damage of underlying soft
tissue from pressure and/or shear. The area may be preceded
by tissue that is painful, firm, mushy, boggy, warmer or
cooler as compared to adjacent tissue.
Further description:
Deep tissue injury may be difficult to detect in individuals
with dark skin tones. Evolution may include a thin blister
over a dark wound bed. The wound may further evolve and
become covered by thin eschar. Evolution may be rapid exposing
additional layers of tissue even with optimal treatment.
Stage
I:
Intact skin with non-blanchable redness of a localized area
usually over a bony prominence. Darkly pigmented skin may
not have visible blanching; its color may differ from the
surrounding area.
Further description:
The area may be painful, firm, soft, warmer or cooler as
compared to adjacent tissue. Stage I may be difficult to
detect in individuals with dark skin tones. May indicate
“at risk” persons (a heralding sign of risk).
Stage
II:
Partial thickness loss of dermis presenting as a shallow
open ulcer with a red pink wound bed, without slough. May
also present as an intact or open/ruptured serum-filled
blister.
Further description:
Presents as a shiny or dry shallow ulcer without slough
or bruising.* This stage should not be used to describe
skin tears, tape burns, perineal dermatitis, maceration
or excoriation.
*Bruising indicates suspected deep tissue injury
Stage
III:
Full thickness tissue loss. Subcutaneous fat may be visible
but bone, tendon or muscle are not exposed. Slough may be
present but does not obscure the depth of tissue loss. May
include undermining and tunneling.
Further description:
The depth of a stage III pressure ulcer varies by anatomical
location. The bridge of the nose, ear, occiput and malleolus
do not have subcutaneous tissue and stage III ulcers can
be shallow. In contrast, areas of significant adiposity
can develop extremely deep stage III pressure ulcers. Bone/tendon
is not visible or directly palpable.
Stage
IV:
Full thickness tissue loss with exposed bone, tendon or
muscle. Slough or eschar may be present on some parts of
the wound bed. Often include undermining and tunneling.
Further description:
The depth of a stage IV pressure ulcer varies by anatomical
location. The bridge of the nose, ear, occiput and malleolus
do not have subcutaneous tissue and these ulcers can be
shallow. Stage IV ulcers can extend into muscle and/or supporting
structures (e.g., fascia, tendon or joint capsule) making
osteomyelitis possible. Exposed bone/tendon is visible or
directly palpable.
Unstageable:
Full thickness tissue loss in which the base of the ulcer
is covered by slough (yellow, tan, gray, green or brown)
and/or eschar (tan, brown or black) in the wound bed.
Further description:
Until enough slough and/or eschar is removed to expose the
base of the wound, the true depth, and therefore stage,
cannot be determined. Stable (dry, adherent, intact without
erythema or fluctuance) eschar on the heels serves as “the
body’s natural (biological) cover” and should
not be removed.
The staging system was defined by Shea in
1975 and provides a name to the amount of anatomical tissue
loss. The original definitions were confusing to many clinicians
and lead to inaccurate staging of ulcers associated or due
to perineal dermatitis and those due to deep tissue injury.
The proposed definitions were refined by
the NPUAP with input from an on-line evaluation of their
face validity, accuracy clarity, succinctness, utility,
and discrimination. This process was completed online and
provided input to the Panel for continued work. The proposed
final definitions were reviewed by a consensus conference
and their comments were used to create the final definitions.
“NPUAP is pleased to have completed this important
task and look forward to the inclusion of these definitions
into practice, education and research,” said Joyce
Black, NPUAP President and Chairperson of the Staging Task
Force.
For more information, contact
[email protected] or
202-521-6789
Copyright
NPUAP 2007
|