Introduction
A deep and narrow wound is hard to manage; mechanical cleansing beyond the edges of the opening and draining discharge are particularly challenging. Because these wounds have small openings, it is difficult to clean the wound bed with curettage or gauze-wiping. Physicians have attempted a variety of procedures to surmount this challenge, including continued irrigation and drainage, pulsed lavage cleansing and modifications thereof, irrigating with closed drain tubes, and the conventional practice of frequently changing dressings using gauze to drain capillaries [1-4].
This case presents a deep and narrow wound irrigated with rectal tubes and Foley catheters. Using easily available tools helped the irrigation and resulted in successful long-term wound care. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Hallym Sacred Heart Hospital (IRB No. 2019-06-021-001) and performed in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. Written informed consent was obtained.
Case
A 33-year-old male patient sustained multiple traumatic injuries from a highway car accident. He suffered a wound on the left side of his perineum opening out towards the back, which would not drain naturally. Irrigation and drainage were performed five times every day. After each treatment, the physicians placed on the wound a piece of povidone-iodine-soaked gauze to drain the discharge through capillary action. The pus drainage almost completely subsided after 1 week. However, during follow-up a 17×2×11-cm sized fluid collection was detected by computed tomography in an intramuscular area of the left gluteus maximus muscle. The fluid collection was communicating with the deep perineal wound, deepening the wound.
The wound was in the shape of a deep tunnel with a dead end where pus collected. The pus would not drain naturally because the patient had fractured his pelvic bone and was unable to change his position. To drain the wound, a rectal tube was inserted all the way through the tunnel and saline irrigation was performed twice every day (Fig. 1). Normally, a rectal tube has only one opening at the end of the tube, so several holes were made to help irrigate the tunnel (Fig. 2). The tube was changed every 3 days, and was kept in position after the irrigation so as to facilitate even minimal natural drainage.
After a week, the fluid collection had decreased to 10×3×6 cm, and follow-up computed tomography confirmed that the rectal irrigation tube was positioned properly. Tube irrigation was continued until the pelvic bone was sufficiently stabilized after several orthopedic surgeries; the orthopedic department recommended postponing soft tissue reconstruction until the pelvic bone was stable enough. A 32-Fr rectal tube was used initially, but as the wound gradually narrowed it was irrigated with increasingly smaller tubes until it was replaced with a 14-Fr Foley catheter (Fig. 3). The patient was given a perineal artery perforator flap surgery after his pelvic bone was stabilized 7 months after the initial trauma (Fig. 4). During the operation, the surgeon observed that the inside of the wound was clean and filled with granulation tissues owing to appropriate management. Three weeks after the flap coverage, the wound was almost fully healed with a minimal skin defect and without any complications such as trapped pus or fluid collection within. At 8 months after surgery, the wound exhibited no complications or recurring infections (Fig. 5).
Discussion
The case presented a wound difficult to manage up to the point that soft tissue coverage was restored. Though it was precise and methodical irrigation that delivered successful outcomes, other wound treatments had also been attempted. Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) was tried several times, but it failed to drain the deeper part of the wound as effectively as the gauze soaking. Curettage and dressing with betadinesoaked gauze also turned out to be less than successful in draining and cleansing the base of the wound. The physicians also considered making a drainage pathway from the deepest part of the wound all the way to the patient’s backside, but they did not try it because this procedure is known to have high morbidity. The tube irrigation method was the procedure that was finally chosen. Though the wound shrank in size only very slowly, there were no further infections or aggravations. At 8 months since the flap coverage, there had been no complications.
A deep and narrow wound with a small opening permits little access to the wound bed and hinders mechanical cleansing. Wounds such as this typically have higher infection rates due lack of effective drainage and hygiene within the wound [5]. Physicians have previously tried various methods to treat deep and narrow wounds. Deschka et al. [1] have documented the use of continuous irrigation and drainage systems for spinal wounds. They managed patients with deep sternal wound infections after cardiac surgery with continuous suction-irrigation drainage and claimed successful outcomes [6]. Using pulsed lavage to cleanse a wound has also been reported by many authors [7,8]. Moreover, Yang and Dai [4] have presented the use of a side-hole double-valve lavage tube as an improvement on conventional lavage techniques.
The case described in this article, where the wound was irrigated using tubes, provided a number of new attempts. First, the course of the irrigation tube was tracked in imaging studies such as computed tomography (Fig. 6), ascertaining the irrigation was cleansing the necessary places throughout the narrow wound. Second, the color of the saline first irrigated provided insight on the nature of the pus or discharge from the deepest point of the wound. Furthermore, instead of using closed drain lines that only fit normal syringes with small openings, in this case rectal tubes or Foley catheters with wider openings that fit on enema syringes were used, making massive irrigation possible. The syringes also made it easy to control the irrigation pressure. Moreover, the universal tubes used in this case enabled use of other medical equipment, such as hanging a urine bag filled with saline on an intravenous stand and connecting it to the tube for continuous irrigation. Simply adjusting the height of the intravenous stand would change the rate of irrigation.
As for the shortcomings of the approach taken, first, the procedure failed to remove biofilms, potentially delaying the healing of the wound or making the wound chronic [9]. Second, there was an extended period of wound management before the flap coverage was performed, because the physicians had to wait for the pelvic bone to be stabilized. Further studies on multiple cases where this particular irrigation and management were applied over shorter durations would contribute to future wound care.
The steps taken in the case worked well for irrigating and cleansing, but did not contribute to draining the discharge. For better drainage, we suggest the use of NPWT devices with simultaneous instillation, as NPWT provides effective draining. Furthermore, the devices allow for continuous cleansing of the wound and control of the instillation rate. However, as the equipment diffuses the fluid to irrigate the wound, not even the most up-to-date machines can make the fluid target a specific point. In their investigation of the fluid dynamics of NPWT with simultaneous instillation, Davis et al. [10] found that though the instillation fluid spreads out rapidly in the demonstration model, the equipment fails to sufficiently cleanse the beds of deep and narrow wounds, as the bed rarely comes into contact with the NPWT sponge. Therefore, NPWT with instillation may not be suitable for cleansing the base of deep and narrow wounds. A combination of the irrigation demonstrated in the case of the 33-year-old male patient, and NPWT with instillation could be considered for managing deep and narrow wounds.
In conclusion, it is recommended to consider using tubes to irrigate deep and narrow wounds. Studies comparing different ways of cleansing and discussing new innovative methods, and also development and use of novel equipment including a combination of focal irrigation and NPWT are encouraged.