From the article in USAToday. . .
“Reeve was being treated at Northern Westchester Hospital for a pressure wound, a common complication for people living with paralysis.”
What’s a pressure wound?
From the article in USAToday. . .
“Reeve was being treated at Northern Westchester Hospital for a pressure wound, a common complication for people living with paralysis.”
What’s a pressure wound?
It’s more commonly called a bed sore.
Yikes.
I didn’t know “bed sores” got so bad.
Thanks.
I used to work as a nurse’s aid in a nursing home. There was this one patient who got a VERY bad bed sore. On her calf. It wound up eating into her leg and turning gangrenous (sp?). It was bad - to the bone. But she refused to have it amputated. ??? The nurses would change her dressing everyday. I helped them out once. They take off the bandages - it looked like her leg had been blown up by a grenade. The sore literally went to the bone with tendons completely exposed and pieces of tissue hanging from them. It smelled awful (like rotting flesh) and actually had a bit of a green color (mixed with the red/pink of the inner leg meat). It was straight out of Tales from the Crypt.
I would think that these would be common enough so that someone like Reeves would get the necessary attention so that they would be avoided.
No?
I just wrote, then, erased a huge rant about the care he received… I wasn’t there.
Reeves was almost certainly getting as much preventive care as possible, Trunk, but it’s damned hard to entirely avoid pressure sores over the very long term. There’s only so many ways to distribute the weight, after all, especially sitting up in a wheelchair. And once one’s gotten a little start, it’s awfully difficult to keep pressure off it long enough for it to heal, because putting someone in other positions more often/for longer periods tends to lead to more pressure sores. We rotate our immobile patients every four hours (every two hours for dogs over 60#), and even so, the ones who are immobile for weeks tend to get ulcerations. Christopher Reeves had been spending hours a day sitting up in a wheelchair for close to 10 years. It would be shocking if he didn’t have a pressure sore.