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john055
it looks like the patient has new onset erythema which points to infection and I think neutrophils make sense. I myself have marked angiogenesis but I did it offline. Is angiogenesis the right answer ?
+1
almondbreeze
according to FA 2019 pg217, neutrophil is present during inflammatory phase- i.e. only up to 3d after the wound. After that we have the proliferative phase with granulation tiss. and angiogenesis, epithelial cell proliferation, dissolution of clot, and wound contraction (involved cells: fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, endothelial cells, keratinocytes, mf)
+1
waterloo
mitchell_to_lakers They are asking why is the incision erythematous and slightly warm. When someone is red, Dr. Sattar says that's because blood is going there. Fibrosis isn't a mechanism where someone's tissue will appear red and warm, it's collagen deposition.
+7
srmtn
is not infected, is healing. normally when healing is a little warm and erythematous because of angiogenesis.
+3
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pfebo
It says no pain or drainage on the stem, this is how I eliminated the answer choices of infiltratiom (neutrophil, lymphocyte)
+1
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submitted by โarmymed88(49)
Wound healing inflammatory for up til 3 days (clots, PMNs, macros) Proliferative 3days til weeks- granulation tissue, new vessels, new epithelium, contraction (repair and regeneration) Remodel 1wk til 6m- replace collagen III with I, increase strength (up to 60-70% original strength possible)