Tag Archives: wound

What Are the Symptoms of Refractory Wounds?

A refractory (hard-to-heal) wound is defined as any break in skin or mucosa that fails to move through an orderly reparative sequence and remains open beyond 4–6 weeks despite standard care. The wound itself and the surrounding tissues display a characteristic set of changes.

  1. Persistent open wound bed
    Granulation tissue is pale, flat or “pocket-like” instead of beefy red and raised; epithelial margins fail to advance and may become rolled or calloused .
  2. Excessive moisture or oozing
    Continuous serous or purulent discharge macerates perilesional skin, increases odour and demands frequent dressing changes .
  3. Pain and malodour
    Deep, throbbing pain is common; an unpleasant smell develops when bacterial load rises or necrotic slough is present, often leading to social isolation .
  4. Recurrent bleeding & fragile tissue
    Minimal trauma causes pinpoint bleeding; capillaries in the wound bed are fragile and rupture easily during debridement .
  5. Peri-wound changes
    Surrounding skin becomes indurated, hyperkeratotic or shows brown haemosiderin staining (venous disease) or shiny hairless atrophy (arterial disease) .
  6. Signs of critical colonisation / infection
    Increase in exudate, change to grey-yellow slough, spreading erythema, new satellite lesions, low-grade fever or leucocytosis herald bacterial biofilm formation .
  7. Functional limitation
    Location on foot, sacrum or leg can restrict walking, sitting or sleep; chronic inflammation and malnutrition produce fatigue and weight loss .

Early recognition allows correction of underlying causes (ischaemia, diabetes, oedema, malnutrition) and adoption of advanced therapies before complications such as cellulitis, osteomyelitis or sepsis develop.

Symptom / SignTypical Features
Non-healing bedPale, flat granulation; rolled edges
Heavy exudateSerous / purulent; macerates skin
Pain & odourThrobbing; foul smell when infected
Easy bleedingFragile capillaries, pinpoint spots
Peri-wound skinInduration, staining, atrophy
Colonisation cluesGrey slough, redness, satellite lesions
Functional lossLimits mobility, disturbs sleep