How to Choose Wound Dressing by Wound Type — A Cli...
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  • June 08, 2026

How to Choose Wound Dressing by Wound Type

Selecting the right dressing is a clinical decision that should be based on systematic wound assessment. The TIME framework (Tissue, Infection/Inflammation, Moisture, Edge) provides a structured approach.

Dressing Selection by Wound Characteristics

Wound CharacteristicRecommended DressingWhy
Dry, necrotic (black eschar)Hydrogel + film/foam coverDonates moisture, promotes autolytic debridement
Sloughy (yellow/brown)Hydrogel, hydrocolloid, or alginateMoisture donation + autolytic debridement
Granulating (red, healthy)Foam, hydrocolloid, or silicone foamMaintains moisture balance, protects new tissue
Epithelializing (pink, new skin)Thin hydrocolloid, film, or silicone dressingProtects delicate new epithelium
Infected (green, purulent)Antimicrobial dressing (silver, iodine, PHMB)Reduces bioburden; change daily
Heavily exudingAlginate, hydrofiber, or super-absorbent foamHigh absorption capacity, prevents maceration
Moderately exudingFoam dressing (polyurethane or silicone)Adequate absorption, maintains moist environment
Low/minimal exudateHydrocolloid or thin film dressingMinimal absorption needed, protects wound
Cavity/deep woundAlginate rope/ribbon or hydrofiber packingFills dead space, absorbs exudate

Product Types and Their Indications

  • Foam Dressings (Polyurethane/Silicone): First-line for most exuding wounds. Available in adhesive and non-adhesive. Silicone foam for fragile skin. Wear time: 3-7 days.
  • Hydrocolloid Dressings: Occlusive or semi-occlusive wafers. Best for low-moderate exudate, shallow wounds. Provides moist environment. Wear time: 3-5 days. Do NOT use on infected wounds.
  • Alginate/Hydrofiber Dressings: Derived from seaweed (alginate) or CMC (hydrofiber). Highly absorbent — holds 15-20x weight in fluid. For moderate-heavy exudate. Requires secondary dressing. Change every 1-3 days.
  • Hydrogel Dressings: Water or glycerin-based gels. Donates moisture to dry wounds. Best for dry eschar, sloughy wounds, minor burns. Requires secondary dressing. Change every 1-3 days.
  • Transparent Film Dressings: Thin polyurethane with adhesive. For superficial wounds, stage I pressure injuries, IV sites. Waterproof, allows visualization. Wear time: 5-7 days.

Decision Algorithm

  1. Assess tissue type: Necrotic → hydrogel. Sloughy → hydrogel or alginate. Granulating → foam. Epithelializing → film/thin hydrocolloid.
  2. Assess exudate: None/low → hydrogel/hydrocolloid/film. Moderate → foam. Heavy → alginate/super-absorbent.
  3. Assess wound depth: Superficial → sheet dressing. Cavity → rope/ribbon/packing.
  4. Assess infection: Signs present → antimicrobial + daily changes. No signs → standard dressing.
  5. Consider patient factors: Fragile skin → silicone. High mobility → conformable foam. Need to shower → waterproof film/foam.

Common Mistakes

  • Using hydrocolloid on infected wounds — occlusive environment worsens infection
  • Using foam on dry wounds — absorbs already-scarce moisture
  • Changing too frequently — disrupts granulation tissue (foam/hydrocolloid can stay 3-7 days)
  • Not reassessing — wounds change; dressing choice must change with them

References: Schultz GS, et al. "TIME Principles of Wound Bed Preparation." Wound Repair and Regeneration, 2003. WUWHS Consensus Document, 2019. NICE Guideline NG74, Chronic Wounds, 2019.

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