A laceration is a traumatic wound caused by blunt or sharp force leading to a tear in the skin and underlying tissues.
Unlike incisions, lacerations often have irregular, jagged edges and variable depth. Management requires careful assessment to restore tissue integrity, reduce infection risk, and optimise functional and cosmetic outcomes.
π§Ύ Causes
- πͺ Sharp trauma: Knives, glass, metal, industrial tools.
- π€ Blunt trauma: Falls, road traffic accidents, sports injuries β often associated with crush injury.
- π Bites: Dog, cat, human bites (high infection risk).
- βοΈ Occupational injuries: Construction, farming, machinery accidents.
β οΈ Complications
- π¦ Infection (cellulitis, abscess, tetanus, necrotising fasciitis).
- π Bleeding, haematoma formation.
- 𦴠Damage to underlying structures (tendons, nerves, vessels, joints, bone).
- π§β𦱠Cosmetic concerns β hypertrophic scars, keloids.
- β Poor wound healing in diabetics, immunosuppressed, or smokers.
π Assessment
- π History: Mechanism of injury, time since injury, tetanus status, medical history (e.g., diabetes, anticoagulants).
- ποΈ Examination: Wound size, depth, contamination, involvement of underlying structures.
Neurovascular status is key (sensation, motor function, distal pulses).
- πΌοΈ Investigations: X-ray if suspicion of foreign body, fracture, or joint involvement.
π οΈ Management Principles
- π§Ό Wound cleaning & debridement: Irrigate with copious saline, remove debris, trim devitalised tissue.
- π Haemostasis: Direct pressure, adrenaline-soaked gauze, or ligation of vessels if needed.
- π§΅ Closure:
- Primary closure (sutures, staples, tissue adhesive, steri-strips) if wound is clean and <12 hours old (face <24 hours).
- Delayed primary closure for contaminated wounds (close after 48β72 hours if no infection).
- Secondary intention for heavily contaminated/infected wounds.
- π Antibiotics: Not always required. Indicated for contaminated wounds, bites, or immunocompromised patients.
- π Tetanus prophylaxis: Check vaccination status; give booster or immunoglobulin if indicated.
- π Aftercare: Keep wound clean, monitor for infection, suture removal timing (face 5 days, scalp 7 days, limb 10β14 days).
π¦· Special Considerations
- π Bite wounds: Do not close primarily unless on the face. Always give antibiotics (co-amoxiclav first-line in UK).
- ποΈ Facial lacerations: Require careful alignment for cosmetic and functional outcome; consider plastics referral.
- β Hand injuries: Explore thoroughly; tendon/nerve injuries often need specialist repair.
π Quick Reference Table
Location |
Suture Removal (days) |
Notes |
Face |
5 |
Fine sutures (6-0 nylon); optimise cosmesis |
Scalp |
7 |
Staples often used |
Trunk |
7β10 |
Check for tension; deep absorbables if required |
Arms/Legs |
10β14 |
Higher infection risk; elevate limb if swollen |
Hands/Feet |
10β14 |
Careful exploration for tendon/nerve injury |
β
Take-Home Messages
- Lacerations require structured assessment: history, wound inspection, neurovascular check.
- Clean and debride before closureβthe solution to pollution is dilution π§.
- Choose closure method based on contamination, time since injury, and cosmetic importance.
- Never forget tetanus status and bite wound protocols.