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wounded
wound (adj.)
1.put in a coil
wound (n.)
1.the act of inflicting a wound
2.a casualty to military personnel resulting from combat
3.a figurative injury (to your feelings or pride)"he feared that mentioning it might reopen the wound" "deep in her breast lives the silent wound" "The right reader of a good poem can tell the moment it strikes him that he has taken an immortal wou..."
4.an injury to living tissue (especially an injury involving a cut or break in the skin)
5.an open skin infection
wound (v. trans.)
1.cause injuries or bodily harm to
2.hurt the feelings of"She hurt me when she did not include me among her guests" "This remark really bruised my ego"
wound (v.)
1.cause damage or affect negatively"Our business was hurt by the new competition"
wounded (adj.)
1.harmed"injured soldiers" "injured feelings"
2.suffering from physical injury especially that suffered in battle"nursing his wounded arm" "ambulances...for the hurt men and women"
3.treated with insolent and rude language especially openly and intentionally
wounded (n.)
1.people who are wounded"they had to leave the wounded where they fell"
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Merriam Webster
WoundWound (?), imp. & p. p. of Wind to twist, and Wind to sound by blowing.
WoundWound (?; 277), n. [OE. wounde, wunde, AS. wund; akin to OFries. wunde, OS. wunda, D. wonde, OHG. wunta, G. wunde, Icel. und, and to AS., OS., & G. wund sore, wounded, OHG. wunt, Goth. wunds, and perhaps also to Goth. winnan to suffer, E. win. √140. Cf. Zounds.]
1. A hurt or injury caused by violence; specifically, a breach of the skin and flesh of an animal, or in the substance of any creature or living thing; a cut, stab, rent, or the like. Chaucer.
Showers of blood
Rained from the wounds of slaughtered Englishmen. Shak.
2. Fig.: An injury, hurt, damage, detriment, or the like, to feeling, faculty, reputation, etc.
3. (Criminal Law) An injury to the person by which the skin is divided, or its continuity broken; a lesion of the body, involving some solution of continuity.
☞ Walker condemns the pronunciation woond as a “capricious novelty.” It is certainly opposed to an important principle of our language, namely, that the Old English long sound written ou, and pronounced like French ou or modern English oo, has regularly changed, when accented, into the diphthongal sound usually written with the same letters ou in modern English, as in ground, hound, round, sound. The use of ou in Old English to represent the sound of modern English oo was borrowed from the French, and replaced the older and Anglo-Saxon spelling with u. It makes no difference whether the word was taken from the French or not, provided it is old enough in English to have suffered this change to what is now the common sound of ou; but words taken from the French at a later time, or influenced by French, may have the French sound.
Wound gall (Zoöl.), an elongated swollen or tuberous gall on the branches of the grapevine, caused by a small reddish brown weevil (Ampeloglypter sesostris) whose larvæ inhabit the galls.
WoundWound (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Wounded; p. pr. & vb. n. Wounding.] [AS. wundian. √140. See Wound, n.]
1. To hurt by violence; to produce a breach, or separation of parts, in, as by a cut, stab, blow, or the like.
The archers hit him; and he was sore wounded of the archers. 1 Sam. xxxi. 3.
2. To hurt the feelings of; to pain by disrespect, ingratitude, or the like; to cause injury to.
When ye sin so against the brethren, and wound their weak conscience, ye sin against Christ. 1 Cor. viii. 12.
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⇨ voir la définition de Wikipedia
wound (n.)
Voir aussi
⇨ Abnormal findings in wound secretion • Abscess wound postprocedural • Dehiscence of operation wound • Dehiscence, Surgical Wound • Disruption of operation wound, not elsewhere classified • Disruption of wound of episiotomy • Disruption of wound of perineal laceration • Gunshot wound • Haematoma of obstetric wound • Infection, Postoperative Wound • Infection, Surgical Wound • Infection, Wound • Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy • Open wound NOS • Open wound involving larynx and trachea • Open wound involving pharynx and cervical oesophagus • Open wound involving thyroid gland • Open wound of abdomen, lower back and pelvis • Open wound of abdominal wall • Open wound of ankle • Open wound of ankle and foot • Open wound of back wall of thorax • Open wound of breast • Open wound of cheek and temporomandibular area • Open wound of ear • Open wound of elbow • Open wound of eyelid and periocular area • Open wound of eyelid and periocular area with or without involvement of lacrimal passage • Open wound of finger(s) NOS • Open wound of finger(s) with damage to nail • Open wound of finger(s) without damage to nail • Open wound of foot NOS • Open wound of forearm • Open wound of forearm, part unspecified • Open wound of front wall of thorax • Open wound of head • Open wound of head, part unspecified • Open wound of hip • Open wound of hip and thigh • Open wound of knee • Open wound of lip and oral cavity • Open wound of lower back and pelvis • Open wound of lower leg • Open wound of lower leg, part unspecified • Open wound of lower limb, level unspecified • Open wound of neck • Open wound of neck, part unspecified • Open wound of nose • Open wound of other and unspecified external genital organs • Open wound of other and unspecified parts of abdomen • Open wound of other and unspecified parts of pelvic girdle • Open wound of other and unspecified parts of shoulder girdle • Open wound of other parts of foot • Open wound of other parts of forearm • Open wound of other parts of head • Open wound of other parts of lower leg • Open wound of other parts of neck • Open wound of other parts of thorax • Open wound of other parts of wrist and hand • Open wound of penis • Open wound of scalp • Open wound of scrotum and testes • Open wound of shoulder • Open wound of shoulder and upper arm • Open wound of thigh • Open wound of thorax • Open wound of thorax, part unspecified • Open wound of toe(s) NOS • Open wound of toe(s) with damage to nail • Open wound of toe(s) without damage to nail • Open wound of trunk, level unspecified • Open wound of unspecified body region • Open wound of upper arm • Open wound of upper limb, level unspecified • Open wound of vagina and vulva • Open wound of wrist and hand • Open wound of wrist and hand part, part unspecified • Penetrating wound of eyeball with foreign body • Penetrating wound of eyeball without foreign body • Penetrating wound of orbit with or without foreign body • Post-traumatic wound infection, not elsewhere classified • Postoperative Wound Infection • Puncture wound with (penetrating) foreign body NOS • Rupture of operation wound • Sequelae of open wound of head • Sequelae of open wound of lower limb • Sequelae of open wound of upper limb • Surgical Wound Dehiscence • Surgical Wound Infection • Wound Dehiscence, Surgical • Wound Healing • Wound Infection • Wound Infection, Postoperative • Wound Infection, Surgical • Wound myiasis • blighty wound • bullet wound • dirty wound • flesh wound • gunshot wound • gunshot wound NOS • haematoma of obstetric wound • loosely wound roll • obstetric (surgical) wound disruption • obstetric (surgical) wound haematoma • obstetric (surgical) wound infection • obstetric surgical wound infection • open wound involving nail (matrix) • open wound of ankle and foot • open wound of eyelid and periocular area • open wound of hip • open wound of wrist and hand • poorly wound roll • puncture wound NOS caused by plant thorns or spines • raw wound • stab wound • wound disruption • wound o.s. • wound tumor virus • wound up
⇨ Transport of Wounded and Sick • Transport, Wounded and Sick • badly wounded • badly wounded person • critically wounded • wounded person
⇨ All Wound Up • All Wound Up (album) • All Wound Up (store) • Army Wound Ribbon • Bite wound • Black wound • Chronic wound • Deep Wound • Deeper the Wound • Entrance Wound • Exit Wound • Head Wound City • Head Wound City (EP) • Hesitation wound • History of wound care • International Red Cross Wound Classification System • Million-dollar wound • Mortal wound • Negative pressure wound therapy • Nurse with Wound • Nurse with Wound list • Omnipop (It's Only a Flesh Wound Lambchop) • On a Wound by Premeditation • Optimum Wound Profile • Phases of wound healing • Prayer to the shoulder wound of Jesus • Proliferative phase of wound healing • Salt in the Wound • Salt the Wound • Self-inflicted wound • So Wound • The Blind Wound • The Primal Wound • The Salt Wound Routine • The Wound-Dresser • Thunder Perfect Mind (Nurse with Wound album) • War Wound • Words from the Exit Wound • Wound Badge • Wound Chevron • Wound Creations • Wound Man • Wound Medal • Wound Medal (Austria–Hungary) • Wound Medal (India) • Wound Medal (Vietnam) • Wound ballistics • Wound colonization • Wound dehiscence • Wound healing • Wound in Wall • Wound stripe • Wound tumor virus • Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurse • Wound-Up Penguin
⇨ Amputees and War Wounded Association • Army Wounded Warrior Program (AW2) • Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee • Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (film) • Carry the Wounded • Flight of the Wounded Locust • For Those Who Hunt The Wounded Down • O Sacred Head, Now Wounded • President's Commission on Care for America's Returning Wounded Warriors • The Walking Wounded • The Weak and the Wounded (album) • The Wounded • The Wounded Angel • The Wounded Buzzard of Christmas Eve • The Wounded Land • The Wounded Lion • The Wounded Man • The Wounded Man (film) • The Wounded Man (painting) • The Wounded Sky • The Wounded Surgeon (book) • United States Congressmen wounded or killed in the line of duty • Walking Wounded • Walking Wounded (song) • Walking wounded • Walking wounded (disambiguation) • Wounded (2005 play) • Wounded (Third Eye Blind song) • Wounded (album) • Wounded Amazon of Kresilas • Wounded Bird Records • Wounded Game • Wounded Knee • Wounded Knee (disambiguation) • Wounded Knee Creek • Wounded Knee Massacre • Wounded Knee incident • Wounded Knee, South Dakota • Wounded Knees • Wounded Land (album) • Wounded Man • Wounded Personnel Medal • Wounded Warrior Project • Wounded healer • Wounded in action
wound (adj.)
coiled[Similaire]
wound (n.)
injury; lesion; wound[ClasseHyper.]
wound (n.)
damage, harm, hurt, mischief, scathe[Hyper.]
injure, wound[Dérivé]
wound (n.)
loss, personnel casualty[Hyper.]
injure, wound[Dérivé]
wound (n.)
distress, hurt, suffering[Hyper.]
wound (n.)
harm, hurt, injury, trauma[Hyper.]
wound (n.)
infection[Hyper.]
wound (v.)
wound (v. tr.)
injure; wound[ClasseHyper.]
injury, lesion, wound[GenV+comp]
wound (v. tr.)
hurt[Hyper.]
wound, wounding - injury - accidental injury, injury - combat injury, injury, wound - harm, hurt, injury, trauma[Dérivé]
wound (v. tr.)
offenser qqn (fr)[Classe]
arouse, elicit, enkindle, evoke, fire, kindle, provoke, raise, vellicate[Hyper.]
distress, hurt, suffering[GenV+comp]
discourtesy, impoliteness, offence, offense, offensive activity - bitchiness, cattiness, nastiness, spite, spitefulness - malice, maliciousness, malignancy, malignity, spite, spitefulness, venom, wickedness - dysphemistic, offensive - offensive[Dérivé]
wounded (adj.)
wounded (adj.)
hit, hurt, injured, wounded[Similaire]
wounded (adj.)
humilié (fr)[Classe]
insulté (fr)[Classe]
offense (fr)[termes liés]
(act of revenge; retaliatory action; reprisal; retaliation; vengeance)[termes liés]
wounded (n.)
militaire comptabilisé en perte (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
injured; injured person; wounded person; wounded; maimed[ClasseEnsembleDe]
people[Hyper.]
Wikipedia
Wound | |
---|---|
Classification and external resources | |
Wounded man |
|
ICD-10 | T14.0-T14.1 |
ICD-9 | 872-893 |
MeSH | D014947 |
A wound is a type of injury in which skin is torn, cut or punctured (an open wound), or where blunt force trauma causes a contusion (a closed wound). In pathology, it specifically refers to a sharp injury which damages the dermis of the skin.
Contents |
Open wounds can be classified according to the object that caused the wound. The types of open wound are:
Closed wounds have fewer categories, but are just as dangerous as open wounds. The types of closed wounds are:
To heal a wound, the body undertakes a series of actions collectively known as the wound healing process.
The overall treatment depends on the type, cause, and depth of the wound as well as whether or not other structures beyond the skin (dermis) are involved. Treatment of recent lacerations involves examining, cleaning, and closing the wound. If there is a delay in treatment and the laceration occurred more than 6-24 hours before evaluation, it may be preferable to heal by secondary intention, due to the high rate of infection associated with delayed closure. Minor wounds, like bruises, will heal on their own, with skin discoloration usually disappearing in 1–2 weeks. Abrasions, which are wounds with intact skin (non-penetration through dermis to subcutaneous fat), usually require no active treatment except keeping the area clean, initially with soap and water. Most abrasions tend to have an overall better appearance post-healing when kept moist for about a week with an ointment, such as aquaphor healing ointment or vasoline. Puncture wounds may be prone to infection depending on the depth of penetration. The entry of puncture wound is left open to allow for bacteria or debris to be removed from inside.
For simple lacerations, cleaning can be accomplished using a number of different solutions, including tap water, sterile saline solution, or an antiseptic solution, such as hydrogen peroxide. Infection rates may be lower with the use of tap water in regions where water quality is high.[1] Evidence for the effectiveness of any cleaning of simple wound however is limited.[1] Cleaning of a wound is also known as wound toilet.[2]
If a person presents to a healthcare center within 6 hours of a laceration they are typically closed immediately after evaluating and cleaning the wound. After this point in time, however, there is a theoretical concern of increased risks of infection if closed immediately.[3] Thus some healthcare providers may delay closure while others may be willing to immediately close up to 24 hours after the injury.[3] A single study has found that using clean non sterile gloves is equivalent to using sterile gloves during wound closure.[4][5]
If closure of a wound is decided upon a number of techniques can be used. These include bandages, a cyanoacrylate glue, staples, and sutures. Absorbable sutures have the benefit over non absorbable sutures of not requiring removal. They are often preferred in children.[6] Buffering the pH of lidocaine makes the freezing less painful.[7]
The effectiveness of dressings and creams containing silver to prevent infection or improve healing is not currently supported by evidence.[8]
Egg Oil has been used in treating wounds and injuries. Ambroise Paré used a solution of egg yolk, oil of roses, and turpentine for war wounds, an old method that the Romans had discovered 1000 years before him. He published his first book 'The method of curing wounds caused by arquebus and firearms' in 1545.
Egg Oil is a natural emollient, and may be used externally on burn wounds,[9] where it reduces pain and promotes re-epithilisation while minimising scars[10]. It has been used effectively against burns in rural Ethiopia[11].
Most clean open wounds do not require any antibiotics unless the wound is contaminated or the bacterial cultures are positive. Excess use of antibiotics only leads to resistance and side effects. All open wounds should be cleaned at least twice a day with warm water and soap. Once the wound is cleaned, it should be covered with moist gauze. This should be followed by application of dry gauze and then the wound covered with a bandage. The purpose of a wet to dry dressing allows the bandage to adhere to dead tissue performing a mechanical debridement when removed.This allows new healthy skin to grow and prevents debris from collecting. When the wound is clean, it may be closed with a skin graft. No wound is ever closed if it is suspected to be infected.[12]
Bacterial infection of wound can impede the healing process and lead to life threatening complications. Scientists at Sheffield University have identified a way of using light to rapidly detect the presence of bacteria. They are developing a portable kit in which specially designed molecules emit a light signal when bound to bacteria. Current laboratory-based detection of bacteria can take hours or even days.[13]
Individuals who have wounds that are not healing should be investigated to find the causes. Many microbiological agents can be responsible for this. The basic workup includes evaluating the wound, its extent and severity. Cultures are usually obtained both from the wound site and blood. X rays are obtained and a tetanus shot may be administered if there is any doubt about prior vaccination [14]
Non-healing wounds of the diabetic foot are considered one of the most significant complications of diabetes, representing a major worldwide medical, social, and economic burden that greatly affects patient quality of life. Almost 24 million Americans—one in every 12—are diabetic and the disease is causing widespread disability and death at an epidemic pace, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those with diabetes, 6.5 million are estimated to suffer with chronic or non-healing wounds. Associated with inadequate circulation, poorly functioning veins, and immobility, non-healing wounds occur most frequently in the elderly and in people with diabetes—populations that are sharply rising as the nation ages and chronic diseases increase.
Although diabetes can ravage the body in many ways, non-healing ulcers on the feet and lower legs are common outward manifestations of the disease. Also, diabetics often suffer from nerve damage in their feet and legs, allowing small wounds or irritations to develop without awareness. Given the abnormalities of the microvasculature and other side effects of diabetes, these wounds take a long time to heal and require a specialized treatment approach for proper healing.
As many as 25% of diabetic patients will eventually develop foot ulcers, and recurrence within five years is 70%. If not aggressively treated, these wounds can lead to amputations. It is estimated that every 30 seconds a lower limb is amputated somewhere in the world because of a diabetic wound. Amputation often triggers a downward spiral of declining quality of life, frequently leading to disability and death. In fact, only about one third of diabetic amputees will live more than five years, a survival rate equivalent to that of many cancers.
Many of these lower extremity amputations can be prevented through an interdisciplinary approach to treatment involving a variety of advanced therapies and techniques, such as debridement, hyperbaric oxygen treatment therapy, dressing selection, special shoes, and patient education. When wounds persist, a specialized approach is required for healing.[15]
From the Classical Period to the Medieval Period, the body and the soul were believed to be intimately connected, based on several theories put forth by the philosopher Plato. Wounds on the body were believed to correlate with wounds to the soul and vice versa; wounds were seen as an outward sign of an inward illness. Thus, a man who was wounded physically in a serious way was said to be hindered not only physically but spiritually as well. If the soul was wounded, that wound may also eventually become physically manifest, revealing the true state of the soul.[16] Wounds were also seen as writing on the "tablet" of the body. Wounds acquired in war, for example, told the story of a soldier in a form which all could see and understand, and the wounds of a martyr told the story of their faith.[16]
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Look up wound in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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