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Wet-to-dry dressing changes
URL of this page: //medlineplus.gov/ency/patientinstructions/000315.htm

Wet-to-dry dressing changes

Your health care provider has covered your wound with a wet-to-dry dressing. With this type of dressing, a wet (or moist) gauze dressing is put on your wound and allowed to dry. Wound drainage and dead tissue can be removed when you take off the old dressing.

Follow any instructions you are given on how to change the dressing. Use this sheet as a reminder.

What to Expect at Home

Your provider will tell you how often you should change your dressing at home.

As the wound heals, you should not need as much gauze or packing gauze.

Removing the Old Dressing

Follow these steps to remove your dressing:

  • Wash your hands thoroughly with soap and warm water before and after each dressing change.
  • Put on a pair of non-sterile gloves.
  • Carefully remove the tape.
  • Remove the old dressing. If it is sticking to your skin, wet it with warm water to loosen it.
  • Remove the gauze pads or packing tape from inside your wound.
  • Put the old dressing, packing material, and your gloves in a plastic bag. Set the bag aside.

Cleaning Your Wound

Follow these steps to clean your wound:

  • Put on a new pair of non-sterile gloves.
  • Use a clean, soft washcloth to gently clean your wound with warm water and soap. Your wound should not bleed much when you are cleaning it. A small amount of blood is OK.
  • Rinse your wound with water. Gently pat it dry with a clean towel. Do not rub it dry. In some cases, you can even rinse the wound while showering.
  • Check the wound for increased redness, swelling, or a bad odor.
  • Pay attention to the color and amount of drainage from your wound. Look for drainage that has become darker, thicker or foul smelling.
  • After cleaning your wound, remove your gloves and put them in the plastic bag with the old dressing and gloves.
  • Wash your hands again.

Changing Your Dressing

Follow these steps to put a new dressing on:

  • Put on a new pair of non-sterile gloves.
  • Pour saline into a clean bowl. Place gauze pads and any gauze packing tape you will use in the bowl.
  • Squeeze the saline from the gauze pads or packing tape until it is no longer dripping.
  • Place the gauze pads or packing tape in your wound. Carefully fill in the wound and any spaces under the skin. Avoid putting the moist gauze onto the skin, and only into the wound.
  • Cover the moistened gauze or packing tape with a large dry dressing pad. Use tape or rolled gauze to hold this dressing in place.
  • Put all used supplies in the plastic bag. Close it securely, then put it in a second plastic bag, and close that bag securely. Put it in the trash.
  • Wash your hands again when you are finished.

When to Call the Doctor

Contact your provider if you have any of these changes around your wound:

  • Worsening redness
  • More pain
  • Swelling
  • Bleeding
  • It is larger or deeper
  • It looks dried out or dark
  • The drainage is increasing
  • The drainage has a bad smell

Also contact your provider if:

  • Your temperature is 100.5°F (38°C), or higher, for more than 4 hours
  • Drainage is coming from or around the wound
  • Drainage is not decreasing after 3 to 5 days
  • Drainage is increasing
  • Drainage becomes thick, tan, yellow, green or smells bad

Alternative Names

Dressing changes; Wound care - dressing change

References

Boukovalas S, Aliano KA, Phillips LG, Norbury WB. Wound healing. In: Townsend CM Jr, Beauchamp RD, Evers BM, Mattox KL, eds. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. 21st ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2022:chap 6.

Chilcott M. Wound dressing. In: Fowler GC, ed. Pfenninger and Fowler's Procedures for Primary Care. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:chap 33.

Patient Instructions

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Review Date 1/21/2025

Updated by: Jonas DeMuro, MD, Diplomate of the American Board of Surgery with added Qualifications in Surgical Critical Care, Assistant Professor of Surgery, Renaissance School of Medicine, Stony Brook, NY. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David C. Dugdale, MD, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.

Related MedlinePlus Health Topics

  • Wounds and Injuries
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