Wound Dock™

A swollen wound can be part of healing—or a warning sign of infection. Learn why wounds swell, common causes, and when swelling needs medical care.

Swelling around a wound is one of the most common changes people notice during healing. A cut, scrape, or surgical incision may look puffy, tight, or raised, especially in the first few days.  This can be uncomfortable and concerning. Many people wonder why a wound is swollen and whether it’s part of healing or a sign of infection.

In many cases, swelling is part of the body’s normal healing response. But swelling that worsens, spreads, or lasts longer than expected may signal infection, fluid buildup, or circulation problems. Understanding why a wound is swollen—and how swelling should change over time—helps prevent small problems from becoming serious complications.

This guide explains common causes of wound swelling, how infection affects swelling, the role of fluid buildup and circulation, and when swelling becomes dangerous and needs medical care.

Causes of Wound Swelling During Healing

Wound swelling occurs when fluid accumulates in the tissue around an injury. This fluid buildup is often caused by inflammation, which is the body’s natural response to tissue damage.

When skin is injured, blood vessels widen and become more permeable. This allows fluid, immune cells, and proteins to move into the area to support healing. As a result, the tissue may appear swollen, firm, or puffy.

Common causes of wound swelling include:

  • Normal inflammatory response
  • Tissue injury or surgery
  • Ongoing pressure or movement
  • Fluid buildup
  • Poor circulation
  • Infection

Swelling alone does not mean a wound is infected. The key is how swelling changes over time.

Inflammatory Response

Inflammation is the body’s first step in healing. It helps clean the wound and protect against bacteria.

During inflammation:

  • Blood flow increases
  • Fluid moves into the tissue
  • Immune cells gather at the wound site

This process causes swelling, redness, warmth, and sometimes mild pain. In early healing, these changes are expected and often peak within the first few days.

Normal inflammatory swelling should:

  • Stay localized near the wound
  • Gradually improve
  • Decrease as healing progresses

When inflammation does not calm down, swelling may persist or worsen instead of improving.

Tissue Damage and Trauma

The amount of swelling often reflects how much tissue was injured. Larger or deeper wounds disrupt more blood vessels and tissue, leading to more fluid leakage.

Swelling may be more noticeable with:

In these cases, swelling may last longer than with minor wounds. As long as swelling slowly improves and no other warning signs appear, it may still be part of normal healing.

Infection-Related Wound Swelling

Wound Infection is one of the most concerning causes of wound swelling. When bacteria multiply in a wound, the immune system responds aggressively. This increases inflammation and fluid production.

Swelling related to infection often behaves differently than normal healing swelling.

Signs Wound Swelling May Be Caused by Infection

Swelling related to infection may:

  • Increase instead of improve
  • Spread beyond the wound edges
  • Feel firm or tight
  • Be accompanied by redness and heat
  • Occur with drainage or foul odor

Infected wounds often show multiple warning signs at the same time.

Other symptoms may include:

  • Worsening pain or tenderness
  • Fever or chills
  • Delayed healing
  • Skin that appears shiny or stretched

Swelling that continues to worsen after the first few days of healing should always be evaluated.

Why Infection Causes More Wound Swelling

Bacteria trigger a stronger immune response. Blood vessels become even more permeable, allowing more fluid to leak into surrounding tissue.

This creates pressure within the tissue, which:

  • Increases pain
  • Slows blood flow
  • Delays healing
  • Forces fluid outward

As swelling increases, the wound environment becomes less stable and more prone to complications.

Fluid Buildup and Circulation Issues

Swelling is not always caused by infection or inflammation alone. Problems with fluid movement and circulation can also cause wounds to swell.

Edema

Edema refers to fluid accumulation in the tissue. It is especially common in the lower legs, ankles, and feet.

Edema-related swelling may:

  • Develop gradually
  • Feel soft or pitting
  • Worsen later in the day
  • Improve with elevation

Edema increases pressure around a wound, making it harder for fluid to drain and for oxygen to reach the tissue.

Wounds surrounded by edema often:

  • Heal more slowly
  • Leak fluid
  • Appear swollen even without infection

Poor Venous Return

Veins carry blood and fluid back toward the heart. When venous return is impaired, fluid pools in the tissue instead of being reabsorbed.

Poor venous return is common in people with:

  • Chronic venous insufficiency
  • Varicose veins
  • Heart failure
  • Prolonged sitting or standing

In these cases, swelling may worsen when the wound is below heart level and improve with rest or elevation.

Poor venous return makes wound swelling harder to resolve and increases the risk of delayed healing.

Poor Circulation

Arterial circulation delivers oxygen and nutrients needed for healing. When circulation is impaired, swelling may persist even when inflammation is mild.

Poor circulation is more common in:

  • Older adults
  • People with diabetes
  • Peripheral artery disease
  • Smokers

Inadequate blood flow limits the body’s ability to clear excess fluid and repair tissue, allowing swelling to linger.

When Wound Swelling is Dangerous

Not all swelling is an emergency, but certain patterns should never be ignored.

Swelling becomes dangerous when it:

  • Rapidly increases
  • Spreads beyond the wound
  • Causes severe pain or tightness
  • Is accompanied by fever or chills
  • Limits movement or sensation
  • Does not improve over time

These signs suggest that swelling may be caused by infection, deep tissue damage, or compromised circulation.

Compartment Pressure and Tissue Damage

Severe swelling can increase pressure within tissue compartments. When pressure rises too high, it restricts blood flow even further.

This can lead to:

  • Tissue death
  • Nerve damage
  • Severe pain
  • Loss of function

Although uncommon, rapidly worsening swelling should be evaluated urgently.

Swelling and Skin Breakdown

Persistent swelling stretches the skin, making it more fragile. Over time, this can cause:

Managing swelling is essential to protecting both the wound and surrounding skin.

How Swelling Changes During Healing

Understanding how swelling should behave helps distinguish normal healing from complications.

Early Healing

  • Swelling appears within hours or days
  • Peaks early
  • Gradually decreases

Delayed Healing

  • Swelling stays the same
  • Improvement stalls
  • Healing slows

Complicated Healing

  • Swelling worsens
  • New symptoms develop
  • Infection risk increases

Trend matters more than appearance on any single day.

How Movement and Position Affect Swelling

Swelling often changes with activity.

Swelling may increase:

  • After walking or standing
  • Later in the day
  • With prolonged sitting

Swelling may decrease:

  • With rest
  • With elevation
  • Overnight

Temporary swelling that improves with rest is often circulation-related rather than infectious.

Why Swelling Can Appear Without Pain

Pain is not always present with wound swelling.

Reduced pain sensation is common in:

  • Diabetes
  • Neuropathy
  • Spinal cord injury
  • Older adults

In these cases, swelling may be the only visible sign of a problem. Visual checks are especially important when pain is unreliable.

How Wound Care Practices Affect Swelling

Wound care choices influence swelling.

Swelling may worsen when:

  • Dressings are too tight
  • Bandages trap moisture
  • Pressure is not relieved
  • Wounds are repeatedly disturbed

Proper dressing fit and pressure relief help control swelling and support healing.

Why Wound Swelling Can Interfere With Wound Healing

Swelling does more than change how a wound looks. Excess fluid around a wound can directly interfere with the healing process. When tissue becomes swollen, pressure builds within the skin and underlying structures. This pressure makes it harder for oxygen and nutrients to reach the wound.

Oxygen is essential for healing. It supports new tissue growth and helps immune cells fight bacteria. When swelling limits oxygen delivery, healing slows. Even wounds that are otherwise well cared for may struggle to improve if swelling remains uncontrolled.

Swelling can also delay healing by:

  • Reducing blood flow to fragile tissue
  • Making wound edges harder to close
  • Increasing tension on healing skin
  • Causing discomfort that limits movement

Over time, persistent swelling keeps wounds stuck in an inflammatory state instead of allowing them to progress into the rebuilding phase of healing.

How Wound Swelling Affects Wound Drainage

Swelling and drainage often occur together. When fluid builds up in surrounding tissue, it increases pressure inside the wound. This pressure can force fluid outward, leading to ongoing leakage or oozing.

Wounds affected by swelling may:

  • Leak clear or pink fluid
  • Soak dressings more quickly
  • Appear wet despite proper care
  • Develop irritation around the wound edges

Drainage caused by swelling does not always mean infection. However, when swelling and drainage increase together, the wound environment becomes less stable. Managing swelling often reduces excess drainage and helps the wound seal more effectively.

Why Wound Swelling Can Return After An Initial Improvement

Many patients notice swelling improves at first, then comes back days later. This can be confusing and discouraging.

Swelling may return when:

  • Activity level increases
  • The wound is placed below heart level
  • Dressings or footwear add pressure
  • Fluid shifts throughout the day

This does not always mean healing has failed. Swelling often fluctuates during recovery. The key concern is whether swelling continues to worsen or stops improving altogether.

Tracking when swelling increases—such as later in the day or after standing—can help determine whether circulation or pressure is contributing rather than infection.

Why Wound Swelling Persists in Chronic Wounds

Chronic wounds remain in an inflammatory state for long periods. This leads to ongoing swelling that may never fully disappear.

In chronic wounds:

  • Fluid cycles in and out
  • Tissue becomes fragile
  • Swelling fluctuates

Changes in swelling are still meaningful. Sudden increases may signal infection or worsening circulation.

Who Is at Higher Risk for Problematic Wound Swelling

Swelling is more likely to become dangerous in people with:

  • Diabetes
  • Poor circulation
  • Heart disease
  • Kidney disease
  • Limited mobility
  • Older age

In these groups, early evaluation is especially important.

What People Can Do to Monitor Wound Swelling

People can help manage wound swelling by:

  • Checking the wound daily
  • Watching for changes in size or firmness
  • Noting when swelling improves or worsens
  • Elevating the area when appropriate
  • Reporting worsening symptoms early

Tracking patterns over time provides valuable information for care decisions.

When to Seek Medical Care

Seek medical care if wound swelling:

  • Increases instead of improving
  • Becomes painful or tight
  • Is accompanied by redness, heat, or drainage
  • Causes fever or chills
  • Interferes with movement
  • Does not improve with basic care

Early care prevents complications and supports healing.

The Role of Elevation in Reducing Wound Swelling

Elevation helps reduce swelling by allowing gravity to assist fluid return toward the heart. This is especially helpful for wounds on the legs, ankles, or feet.

Elevation works best when:

  • The wound is raised above heart level
  • The position is maintained for extended periods
  • It is combined with movement when appropriate

Elevation does not replace medical care, but it can significantly reduce swelling related to fluid pooling. When swelling improves with elevation but returns when the limb is lowered, circulation issues are often involved.

Why Wound Swelling Deserves Early Attention

Swelling is often one of the first visible signs that a wound is under stress. Addressing swelling early helps prevent a cascade of complications.

Early attention to swelling can:

  • Improve oxygen delivery
  • Reduce drainage and skin breakdown
  • Lower infection risk
  • Shorten healing time

Ignoring swelling allows pressure and inflammation to build. Over time, this increases the risk of delayed healing, wound enlargement, and infection.

Key Takeaway

Swelling around a wound is common, especially early in healing, but it should always be monitored closely. Swelling that gradually improves is often part of the body’s repair process.  When swelling spreads, worsens, or begins to limit comfort or movement, it may signal that healing is under strain.

The most important clue is change over time. Swelling that settles as days pass is reassuring, while swelling that lingers or intensifies may point to infection, fluid buildup, or circulation problems. Paying attention to these patterns—and seeking evaluation early—can prevent a manageable wound from becoming more complicated.

Concerned About Infection?

If your wound is swollen and not improving—or if swelling is getting worse—it may be a sign of infection. Learn the early warning signs and when treatment matters.

References:

1. Schilrreff, P., et al. (2022). Chronic inflammation in non-healing skin wounds and advanced therapeutic approaches.[Journal/Publisher]. PMID: 35563319.

2. Ding, X., Tang, Q., Xu, Z., Xu, Y., Zhang, H., Zheng, D., Wang, S., Tan, Q., Maitz, J., Maitz, P. K., Yin, S., Wang, Y., & Chen, J. (2022). Challenges and innovations in treating chronic and acute wound infections: from basic science to clinical practice. Burns & trauma, 10, tkac014.

3. Lent-Schochet, D., & Jialal, I. (2025). Physiology, edema (Updated 2023 May 1). In  StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing.

4. Castera, M. R., & Borhade, M. B. (2025). Fluid management (Updated 2025 April 29). In StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing.

5. Zabaglo, M., Leslie, S. W., & Sharman, T. (2025). Postoperative wound infections (Updated 2024 March 5). In StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing.

Why is your burn not healing? Learn common causes, warning signs, and when delayed burn healing may signal infection or require medical care.

Most minor burns should show steady improvement over time. Redness fades, pain decreases, and new skin gradually forms. When a burn fails to heal or appears to worsen, it often signals that something is interfering with the body’s natural repair process.

A burn that is not healing can be frustrating and concerning, especially when symptoms linger longer than expected. Delayed healing increases the risk of infection, scarring, and long-term skin damage.

This guide explains common reasons why a burn may not be healing, what warning signs to watch for, and when medical evaluation is necessary.

What Normal Burn Healing Looks Like

Understanding normal healing timelines helps clarify when a burn is truly delayed. Healing varies based on burn depth, size, and location.

Superficial burns typically heal within one to two weeks. Partial-thickness burns may take two to three weeks or longer. Deeper burns can require months of treatment and may not heal without medical intervention.

Normal healing involves gradual improvement. Pain lessens, redness decreases, drainage diminishes, and new tissue forms. When this progression stalls or reverses, delayed healing becomes more likely.

Common Reasons a Burn Is Not Healing

Burns fail to heal for many reasons. Often, multiple factors contribute simultaneously.

Infection

Infection is one of the most common reasons a burn does not heal. Bacteria entering damaged skin trigger inflammation that interferes with tissue repair.  Signs of infection include worsening redness, increasing pain, swelling, abnormal drainage, foul odor, fever, or skin discoloration. Even mild infections can significantly delay healing if left untreated.

Burn Depth Greater Than Expected

Some burns appear minor initially but are deeper than they seem. Partial-thickness and full-thickness burns damage deeper skin layers, blood vessels, and connective tissue.  Deeper burns have reduced circulation, limiting oxygen and immune cell delivery. Without adequate blood flow, healing slows dramatically.

Poor Blood Circulation

Adequate circulation is essential for healing. Blood delivers oxygen, nutrients, and immune cells needed to repair tissue.  Conditions such as peripheral artery disease, chronic venous insufficiency, heart disease, or diabetes impair circulation and slow healing. Burns in areas with already limited blood flow are especially vulnerable

Repeated Trauma or Friction

Burns that are repeatedly disturbed struggle to heal. Friction from clothing, frequent dressing changes, scratching, or pressure disrupts fragile new tissue.  Burns over joints or high-movement areas are particularly prone to delayed healing due to constant mechanical stress.

Improper Wound Care

Inadequate cleaning, poor dressing selection, or infrequent dressing changes can expose burns to bacteria or dry out healing tissue.  Conversely, excessive moisture without proper airflow can also impair healing. Burns require a balanced environment that supports tissue repair while preventing infection.

Medical Conditions That Delay Burn Healing

Certain health conditions interfere with the body’s ability to repair damaged skin.

Diabetes

Diabetes significantly increases the risk of delayed healing. Elevated blood glucose impairs immune response, reduces circulation, and slows cell regeneration.  Reduced sensation may also prevent early detection of worsening symptoms, allowing burns to deteriorate before care is sought.

Immune Suppression

People with weakened immune systems heal more slowly. This includes individuals undergoing chemotherapy, taking long-term steroids, or living with autoimmune conditions.  A reduced immune response allows bacteria to persist longer and increases infection risk.

Advanced Age

As people age, skin becomes thinner and less elastic. Cell turnover slows, and immune response weakens.  Older adults often heal more slowly and are more susceptible to complications from even minor burns.

Nutritional Factors That Affect Healing

Nutrition plays a critical role in tissue repair. Burns increase metabolic demand, requiring additional nutrients to support healing.

Protein deficiency slows collagen formation and tissue regeneration. Inadequate intake of vitamins A, C, and zinc also impairs wound healing.

Malnutrition or unintentional weight loss during recovery can significantly delay healing and increase infection risk.

Smoking and Burn Healing

Smoking is a major contributor to delayed wound healing. Nicotine constricts blood vessels, reducing oxygen delivery to injured tissue.

Carbon monoxide decreases oxygen availability, while toxins impair immune cell function.

Smokers often experience slower healing, higher infection rates, and increased scarring after burns.

Signs a Burn Is Not Healing Properly

Delayed healing is not always obvious. Warning signs often develop gradually.

Redness that spreads instead of fading suggests ongoing inflammation or infection. Persistent swelling or warmth may indicate deeper tissue involvement.

Pain that intensifies or returns after initial improvement is concerning. Increased or abnormal drainage, especially if thick or foul-smelling, is another warning sign.

A burn that fails to decrease in size over time or reopens after partial healing should be evaluated.

Chronic Burns and Non-Healing Wounds

When a burn fails to heal after several weeks, it may become a chronic wound. Chronic burns are more difficult to treat and often require specialized care.

Ongoing inflammation damages healthy tissue and prevents closure. Chronic wounds carry a higher risk of infection, scarring, and functional impairment.

Early intervention improves outcomes and reduces long-term complications.

How Scarring Can Interfere With Healing

Excessive scarring can restrict blood flow and movement, further slowing healing. Thick or raised scars may form when inflammation persists.

Burns over joints are particularly prone to contractures, which limit mobility and disrupt normal healing patterns.

Managing inflammation and infection early reduces scarring risk and supports better long-term outcomes.

Psychological Stress and Healing

Stress affects the immune system and slows wound repair. Anxiety, depression, and chronic stress increase inflammation and impair immune response.

Burn injuries can be emotionally distressing, especially when healing is prolonged. Addressing mental and emotional well-being supports physical recovery.

How Burns Are Evaluated When Healing Is Delayed

Healthcare providers assess delayed healing by examining burn depth, size, location, and surrounding tissue.  Signs of infection, circulation problems, and tissue viability are evaluated. Wound cultures or imaging may be used when infection or deeper involvement is suspected.  Blood tests may assess nutritional status or underlying conditions contributing to delayed healing.

Treatment Options for a Burn That Is Not Healing

Treatment depends on the underlying cause.

Infections may require topical or systemic antibiotics. Poor circulation may require vascular evaluation or compression therapy.

Advanced dressings, debridement, or referral to a burn specialist may be necessary for chronic or deep burns.

Addressing nutrition, controlling blood glucose, and eliminating smoking significantly improve healing potential.

How Burn Location Affects Healing

Where a burn occurs on the body has a significant impact on how quickly and effectively it heals. Certain areas are more vulnerable to delayed healing due to movement, circulation, or exposure.

Burns located over joints such as the knees, elbows, wrists, or ankles heal more slowly because constant motion disrupts fragile new tissue. Repeated stretching and bending can reopen partially healed areas and increase inflammation.

Burns on the hands and feet are at higher risk due to frequent use, friction, and exposure to contaminants. These areas also contain many small blood vessels and nerves that can be damaged by deeper burns.

Facial burns typically have good blood supply and often heal faster, but they still require close monitoring due to cosmetic concerns and infection risk near the eyes, nose, and mouth.

Burns in areas with thinner skin, such as the inner arms or lower legs, may penetrate deeper and heal more slowly, especially in older adults or people with circulation issues.

The Role of Moisture Balance in Burn Healing

Maintaining the right moisture balance is critical for burn healing. Burns that are too dry or too wet both heal poorly.

Excessive dryness causes scab formation, which slows epithelial cell migration and delays closure. On the other hand, too much moisture can lead to maceration, where surrounding skin becomes soft and fragile.

Signs moisture balance may be off include:

  • Whitish, soggy skin around the burn
  • Increased drainage without size reduction
  • Cracking or bleeding tissue
  • Increased pain during dressing changes

Modern burn care focuses on dressings that maintain a moist healing environment while protecting against infection. Proper dressing choice should be based on burn depth, drainage level, and location.

Common Mistakes That Delay Burn Healing

Even well-intentioned care can sometimes slow healing. Some of the most common mistakes include:

  • Changing dressings too frequently, which disrupts new tissue
  • Using harsh antiseptics repeatedly, causing tissue irritation
  • Allowing burns to air out for prolonged periods
  • Scratching or picking at healing skin
  • Wearing tight or abrasive clothing over burns
  • Ignoring mild worsening symptoms, assuming they are “normal”

Correcting these issues early can significantly improve healing outcomes.

How Underlying Inflammation Impacts Healing

Inflammation is a normal part of burn healing, but prolonged or excessive inflammation interferes with tissue repair.

When inflammation remains elevated, immune cells continue releasing enzymes and chemicals that damage healthy tissue. This can prevent new skin from forming and prolong open wounds.

Chronic inflammation is more common in people with:

  • Autoimmune conditions
  • Obesity
  • Poorly controlled diabetes
  • Ongoing infection
  • Repeated mechanical irritation

Reducing inflammation through proper wound care, infection control, nutrition, and medical management supports faster healing.

Burn Healing Timeline: What’s Normal vs Concerning

The table below helps clarify expected healing progression and when delays may signal a problem.

Healing Stage What’s Typically Normal When to Be Concerned
First 3–5 days Redness, swelling, mild drainage Increasing pain, spreading redness
1–2 weeks Gradual pain reduction, new skin forming No improvement or worsening symptoms
2–3 weeks Burn shrinking, less drainage Burn remains open or enlarges
3–4 weeks Continued closure and strengthening Persistent drainage or discoloration
Beyond 4 weeks Near or complete healing Chronic open wound or repeated breakdown

Healing timelines vary, but lack of steady progress should always prompt evaluation.

The Impact of Repeated Infection on Burn Healing

Burns that become infected multiple times are far more likely to develop chronic healing problems. Each infection episode increases inflammation and tissue damage.

Repeated infections can:

  • Destroy newly formed tissue
  • Increase scar thickness
  • Reduce skin elasticity
  • Delay closure for months
  • Increase risk of permanent damage

Early treatment of even mild infection reduces the risk of recurrence and long-term complications.

Burn Healing and Scar Prevention

Scarring is influenced by how a burn heals. Slow or complicated healing increases the likelihood of raised, thick, or restrictive scars.

Factors that increase scarring risk include:

  • Deep burns
  • Infection during healing
  • Prolonged inflammation
  • Delayed closure
  • Burns over joints

Supporting timely healing reduces scar formation and improves cosmetic and functional outcomes.

How Lifestyle Choices Support Burn Healing

Daily habits play an important role in recovery. Small changes can significantly improve healing speed.

Helpful practices include:

  • Staying well hydrated
  • Eating adequate protein at each meal
  • Managing blood sugar levels
  • Avoiding smoking and vaping
  • Protecting burns from sun exposure
  • Getting adequate sleep

These factors support immune function, tissue regeneration, and inflammation control.

When Specialist Care May Be Needed

Some burns require evaluation by a burn specialist or wound care clinic, especially when healing is delayed.

Referral is often recommended when:

  • Burns fail to heal after several weeks
  • Infection recurs
  • Burns involve joints, hands, feet, face, or genitals
  • Scarring limits movement
  • Pain remains severe or worsening

Specialized care can include advanced dressings, debridement, compression therapy, or surgical intervention.

Why Early Intervention Makes a Difference

Delayed burn healing rarely improves without addressing the underlying cause. Early evaluation allows clinicians to identify infection, circulation problems, or care issues before complications develop.

Timely treatment reduces healing time, lowers infection risk, minimizes scarring, and improves long-term outcomes.

Recognizing delays early protects both physical recovery and quality of life.

When to Seek Medical Care

Medical evaluation is recommended when a burn shows no improvement after one to two weeks, worsens instead of healing, or develops signs of infection.

Immediate care is needed for burns with fever, spreading redness, severe pain, skin discoloration, or systemic symptoms.

Early treatment reduces complications and improves healing outcomes.

Preventing Delayed Burn Healing

Proper initial care reduces the risk of delayed healing. Cooling the burn promptly limits tissue damage.

Keeping burns clean, protected, and appropriately dressed supports healing. Avoiding friction, managing chronic conditions, and maintaining good nutrition are equally important.

Monitoring healing daily allows early identification of problems before complications develop.

Final Thoughts

A burn that is not healing is a sign that the body’s repair process is being disrupted. Infection, poor circulation, underlying health conditions, and improper care are common contributors.  Recognizing warning signs early and seeking medical evaluation when healing stalls can prevent long-term damage. With appropriate treatment and support, most burns can heal safely and effectively.

If your burn is not healing or appears to be getting worse, seek medical evaluation to identify the cause and prevent complications.

References:

1. Warby, R., & Maani, C. V. (2023, September 26). Burn classification. In StatPearls [Internet]. StatPearls Publishing.

2. Physio-Pedia. (n.d.). Assessment of infection in burn injuries. Retrieved January 18, 2026,

3. Zemaitis, M. R., Boll, J. M., Kato, M., & Golla, M. S. G. (2025). Peripheral arterial disease. In StatPearls [Internet]. StatPearls Publishing.

4. Goyal, R., Singhal, M., & Jialal, I. (2023). Type 2 diabetes. In StatPearls [Internet]. StatPearls Publishing.

5. Ju, M., Kim, Y., & Seo, K. W. (2023). Role of nutrition in wound healing and nutritional recommendations for promotion of wound healing: A narrative review. Annals of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism, 15(3), 67–71.

6. Bonilla, J. C., Rodríguez-Reyes, D., Serpa-Irizarry, M., Díaz-Cortés, H., Barreras, F., & Rivera-Barrios, A. (2025). The impact of nicotine on wound healing: A comparative review of cigarettes, vaping, and nicotine patches with insights into pathophysiological mechanisms. Medical Research Archives, 13(6).

7. Burns & Trauma. (n.d.). Burn hypertrophic scarring. Oxford Academic.

8. Basu, S., Goswami, A. G., David, L. E., & Mudge, E. (2024). Psychological stress on wound healing: A silent player in a complex background. International Journal of Lower Extremity Wounds, 23(3), 365–371.

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