Bandage wear duration varies by injury type, severity, and clinical purpose. Keeping a bandage on too briefly undermines edema control; wearing one too long without reassessment can cause skin breakdown and circulatory compromise.
| Scenario | Initial Bandage Duration | Total Compression Period |
|---|---|---|
| Acute Ankle Sprain (Grade I-II) | Continuous for 48-72 hours (rewrap every 8-12h) | 1-2 weeks (daytime during activity after 72h) |
| Acute Wrist Sprain | Continuous for 24-48 hours | 5-7 days during activity |
| Post-cast Removal | Daytime wear for 1-2 weeks to control rebound swelling | 1-3 weeks, gradually weaning off |
| Venous Leg Ulcer | Multi-layer compression, changed 1-2x weekly by clinician | Indefinite until ulcer heals, then compression stockings |
| Mild Muscle Strain | 4-6 hours at a time, remove for sleep | 3-5 days during activity |
| Dressing Retention (Non-Compression) | Per dressing change schedule (1-7 days) | Until dressing no longer needed |
| Lymphedema | Multi-layer bandaging, changed by therapist 2-3x weekly | Ongoing — part of maintenance therapy |
For acute injuries with dynamic swelling (first 72 hours), rewrap the bandage every 8-12 hours. Swelling changes throughout the day — a bandage that was correct at 8 AM may be too tight at 8 PM, or too loose the next morning.
Remove immediately if:
Remove for assessment:
Do NOT abruptly stop compression after an injury. Gradual weaning prevents rebound swelling:
For most injuries, remove compression bandages during sleep unless specifically instructed otherwise. During sleep:
Exception: Venous leg ulcers, severe lymphedema, and specific post-surgical protocols may require overnight compression — but only under clinical supervision with proper multi-layer bandaging systems.
References: Kerkhoffs GMMJ, et al. "Acute Ankle Sprain: Diagnosis and Treatment." BMJ, 2012. NICE CG168, Venous Leg Ulcers, 2019. Wounds International Compression Therapy Consensus, 2020.