How to heal Open wounds Natural cheapest remedies
Help yourself
When you have an open wounds, just
put on sterilized bandage sugar, secure it. It would heal during the night or after one week.
If your health is very
important to
you and if you want live longer.
Don’t take chemical medicine.
Don’t
apply it to your skin. Your skin will absorbs everything.
So, be careful.
Obviously you should go to the doctor
if you really feel bad and nothing else helps you.
- clean wound, a wound made under sterile conditions where there are no organisms present in the wound and the wound is likely to heal without complications.
- contaminated wound, where the wound is as a result of accidental injury where there are pathogenic organisms and foreign bodies in the wound.
- infected wound, where the wound has pathogenic organisms present and multiplying showing clinical signs of infection, where it looks yellow, oozing pus, having pain and redness.
- colonized wound, where the wound is a chronic one and there are a number of organisms present and very difficult to heal as in a bedsore.
Open wounds can be classified according to the object that caused the wound. The types of open wound are:
Incisions or incised wounds, caused by a clean, sharp-edged object such as a knife, razor, or glass splinter.
Lacerations, irregular tear-like wounds caused by some blunt trauma. Lacerations and incisions may appear linear (regular) or stellate (irregular). The term laceration is commonly misused in reference to incisions.
Abrasions (grazes), superficial wounds in which the topmost layer of the skin (the epidermis) is scraped off. Abrasions are often caused by a sliding fall onto a rough surface.
Injuries in which a body structure is forcibly detached from its normal point of insertion. A type of amputation where the extremity is pulled off rather than cut off.
Puncture wounds, caused by an object puncturing the skin, such as a splinter, nail or needle.
Penetration wounds, caused by an object such as a knife entering and coming out from the skin.
Gunshot wounds, caused by a bullet or similar projectile driving into or through the body. There may be two wounds, one at the site of entry and one at the site of exit, generally referred to as a "through-and-through."

