Home Prevention and Wellness Staying Healthy First Aid and Injury Prevention Incision Care After Surgery
When you’re recovering from surgery, the last thing you want is a problem with your incision. An incision is the cut or wound from a surgery. Your doctor usually stiches it closed, but he or she may also use staples, tape, or glue. With proper care, it turns into a scar. Taking care of your incision after surgery is important to your health. Proper care can reduce the risk of infection and help you return to normal sooner. Incisions vary by size and location.
Path to improved health
After surgery, your doctor will tell you how to care for your incision. His or her instructions might include:
- When to remove the bandage. In some cases, your bandage should be removed the day after surgery. This depends on the location of the surgery, the seriousness of the surgery, and incision. Most wounds don’t require a bandage after a few days. However, you may decide to wear a bandage to protect the incision.
- Keep your incision dry. This is especially true for the first 24 hours. Avoid showering or bathing the first day, and try taking a sponge bath instead. It’s usually okay to wash with soap and water by the second day. Take a shower instead of a bath if you have stitches or skin tape on your incision. Gently towel-dry the incision after washing.
- Removing the stitches. You should not remove your own stitches. Your doctor will remove stitches that don’t disappear into your skin on their own. Those types of stitches are usually removed 3 days to 3 weeks after surgery. This will depend on where they are and how quickly you heal. Your doctor may apply skin tape after the stitches are removed. Skin tape provides additional wound support. The tape can be removed in 3 to 7 days. Sometimes, your doctor will close your incision with internal stitches (stitches under the surface of your skin). Those typically are absorbed by your body gradually and don’t need to be removed. Healing skin may need months to regain most of its strength.
- Limit movement around the stitches. Limiting movement of the area around your incision improves healing. Therefore, you should avoid activities that could cause your incision to pull apart such as lifting, straining, exercise, or sports for the first month or so after surgery. Call your doctor if the incision pulls apart.
- Always wash your hands before caring for your incision. Ask your doctor if you need to use a rubbing alcohol-based soap or wipes to clean the wound.
Things to consider
- If your incision breaks open, call your doctor. Your doctor may decide not to close it again with stitches. If that happens, your doctor will show you how to care for your incision a different way. This will likely involve the use of bandages to absorb the drainage that comes from the incision. The bandages will have to be changed frequently. The incision will heal in time, from inside out.
- People who have diabetes are at risk of wound care problems. This means wounds heal more slowly and require more care.
- If your incision is red, this may be a sign of infection. Some redness is normal. However, call your doctor if the redness is increasing or if it spreads more than half an inch from the wound. You should also call your doctor if you see pus in the incision or if the incision is more than mildly tender or painful. Your doctor may ask you to apply an antibiotic ointment to the incision. This does not require a prescription.
- If your incision bleeds, replace your bandage with a clean, dry bandage or gauze. Apply pressure directly to the incision for a few minutes to stop the bleeding. If it continues to bleed, call your doctor.
- If you’re outside in the sun, cover your scar with tape or sunscreen for the first 6 months after surgery. Sunburns can darken a healing scar and make them more noticeable.
Questions to ask your doctor
- Can a new incision become infected during my hospital stay?
- How can I prevent my clothing from irritating my incision?
- Does it hurt when the stitches are removed?
Resources
National Institutes of Health, MedlinePlus: Wound care centers
Last Updated:
This article was contributed by familydoctor.org editorial staff.
Categories: First Aid and Injury Prevention, Prevention and Wellness, Staying Healthy
Tags: incision, Surgical, treatment, wound
Copyright © American Academy of Family Physicians
This information provides a general overview and may not apply to everyone. Talk to your family doctor to find out if this information applies to you and to get more information on this subject.