1. Introduction: Defining the Maintenance Wound
In clinical practice, we are professionally conditioned to view wound closure as the only metric of success. Acute wounds follow an orderly physiological sequence toward repair, but as patients face advanced illness or the end of life, we encounter a different reality: the “maintenance wound.” While a typical chronic wound has the potential to heal if barriers are removed, maintenance wounds occur when the body’s internal environment is so compromised by systemic failure that the normal sequence of healing is permanently stalled.
Key Definition Maintenance Wounds are injuries where the physiological sequence of repair is interrupted by underlying conditions that make complete closure an unrealistic clinical endpoint. In these cases, the specialist’s focus must shift from “healing” to “maintenance”—proactively stabilizing the wound, preventing deterioration, and prioritizing the patient’s sense of identity and quality of life.
2. The Pathophysiology of Non-Healing: Why Some Wounds Won’t Close
To provide effective palliative care, we must move beyond local wound assessment and understand the biological barriers to closure. When the skin, the body’s largest organ, begins to fail, cellular activities such as fibroblast proliferation and collagen synthesis are sacrificed to maintain vital organ homeostasis.
| Cofactor | Mechanism of Impairment |
| End-Stage Arterial Disease & Low Perfusion | Severe hypoxia prevents collagen formation. Subclinical hypovolemia ensures that even supplemental oxygen cannot reach tissues, as there is insufficient circulating volume to transport oxygen for tissue repair. |
| Malignancy & Inflammatory Mimickers | Fungating wounds prioritize cancerous infiltration over healthy repair. Critically, autoinflammatory conditions like Pyoderma Gangrenosum (PG) are often misdiagnosed as standard ulcers; unlike typical wounds, PG requires immunosuppressive therapy, and traditional debridement may actually worsen the lesion. |
| Severe Malnutrition | Protein-calorie malnutrition decreases fibroblast proliferation. When carbohydrate intake is low, the body diverts protein from tissue repair to provide glucose for cellular maintenance and leukocyte phagocytosis. |
| Mineral Deficiencies | Deficiencies in Zinc and Iron (often seen in chronic metabolic stress) impair the hydroxylation of proline and lysine required for normal collagen formation. |
3. Recognizing Terminal Phenomena: KTU, SCALE, and TB-TTI
At the end of life, skin failure is a clinical reality. As specialists, we must differentiate between these specific terminal phenomena to set realistic expectations and prevent the misconception of “neglect.”
- Kennedy Terminal Ulcers (KTU): These are sudden-onset sacral or coccygeal lesions. While often pear-shaped, they can also present in butterfly or horseshoe patterns. A specific variant, the “3:30 Syndrome,” presents with rapid blackened discoloration or “dirt-like” specks that evolve over a mere 6 to 8 hours.
- Skin Changes At Life’s End (SCALE): A consensus-based term describing the physiological changes resulting from the dying process. SCALE reflects compromised skin integrity due to reduced perfusion, impaired waste removal, and decreased tolerance to external insults.
- Trombley-Brennan Terminal Tissue Injuries (TB-TTI): Distinct from KTUs, these appear as horizontal, bruise-like patterns or linear striations. They often present as mirror-images on areas of little to no pressure, such as the shins, thighs, or the thoracic spine, signifying internal organ failure.
4. Shifting the Focus: The “5 P’s” of Maintenance Care
Transitioning from curative to palliative wound care is a proactive clinical choice. The “5 P’s” framework helps us determine interventions that honor the patient’s status:
- Prevention: Implementing strategies to protect at-risk skin areas from new breakdown.
- Prescription: Treating wounds that still possess a biological potential to heal.
- Preservation: Focused maintenance of the status quo to prevent further deterioration or infection.
- Palliation: Prioritizing the relief of suffering, comfort, and symptom relief over aggressive measures.
- Preference: Explicitly honoring the patient’s desires and values regarding their care.
5. Managing the Most Distressing Symptoms: Pain and Odor
As specialists, we must navigate the profound impact these symptoms have on Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). Maintenance care is an active pursuit of dignity.
The Challenge of Pain
We often face a clinical paradox: repositioning a patient is necessary to relieve pressure, yet the act of moving can cause excruciating procedural pain. However, we must recognize that effective pain management is a physiological prerequisite for prevention. Chronic pain induces immobility and vasoconstriction; when pain is controlled, we reduce the risk of further tissue breakdown caused by the acceleration of tissue failure.
Eradicating Malodor with Metronidazole
Wound odor is driven by anaerobic bacteria (such as Bacteroides or Fusobacterium) that emit putrescine and cadaverine. These compounds are so distressing they can cause caregivers to gag and patients to sink into social isolation. Evidence supports the use of topical metronidazole (0.75% or 0.8% gel) applied directly to the wound. This treatment can eradicate anaerobic-driven malodor within 24 to 48 hours, restoring the social environment for the patient and their family.
6. Setting Realistic Goals with the “Circle of Care”
Success in maintenance care must be measured by Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs). Building a relationship based on mutual trust is as vital as any dressing.
Clinician’s Checklist for Communication:
- [ ] Acknowledge Social Stigma: Address the shame and guilt associated with malodorous or malignant wounds to reduce patient withdrawal.
- [ ] Utilize PROMs: Use validated tools to gain insight into the patient’s perception of their condition and how it impacts their daily functioning.
- [ ] Attentive Listening: React proactively to “early warning symptoms” of deterioration reported by the patient or family.
- [ ] Holistic Assessment: Incorporate the patient’s psychological and sociological history into the care plan, recognizing that the wound now dominates their identity.
- [ ] Define Success Beyond Healing: Clearly communicate that improving daily life quality is a valid and successful health outcome.
7. Conclusion: The Dignity of Maintenance
A non-healing wound at the end of life is not a practice failure; it is the physiological manifestation of organ failure. When the skin can no longer maintain homeostasis, our role shifts from “fixers” to “sustainers.” By focusing on preservation and palliation, we protect the patient’s identity and dignity during their final journey.
Practice Pearl: Success in maintenance care is redefined as optimizing the patient’s well-being and sense of identity when the body’s largest organ can no longer maintain its integrity.