The first response to tissue damage in the body is hemostasis, which includes 3 stages: (1) vasoconstriction (narrowing of the vessel lumen); (2) thrombus formation;(3) activation of the blood coagulation system with the formation of a fibrin plug (blood clot).Blood and lymph flows out of damaged blood and lymph vessels, filling the wound and cleaning the wound surface. Almost immediately, the blood vessels undergo reflex narrowing and damage to the endothelium, activating platelets with the subsequent formation of a thrombus inside the wound defect. The blood clot protects the wound, dries up to form a scab, and allows the wound healing process underneath.Vasoconstriction lasts only 5-10 minutes and is accompanied by the release of hormones such as catecholamines, serotonin, bradykinin, prostaglandins and histamine to minimize blood loss. This is followed by the process of vasodilation (vasodilation), due to which the intravascular components through the damaged areas of the vessels go into the intercellular spaces. As a result of endothelial damage, tissue thromboplastin, an internal coagulation cascade, is activated, and fibrinogen is converted into an insoluble network of fibrin fibers and constitutes a fibrin plug.In the first 24–48 hours, a preliminary extracellular matrix is formed within the clot. On the 4th-7th day, the preliminary extracellular matrix is converted into a permanent structure and the wound becomes inaccessible to bacteria.
Thus, the fibrin network acts not only as a hemostatic agent, but also as a barrier to infection, prevents fluid loss, is a substrate for wound healing, and stabilizes wound edges.The inflammatory phase is characterized by the migration of leukocytes into the wound within 6 hours after injury. Leukocytes adhere to the vascular endothelium along the edge of the site of inflammation at the wound site. Inflammation begins with the activation of the complement system during injury.
Additional decomposition products attract neutrophils to the wound, which during the first 3 days are the predominant cell type, reaching a maximum in the first 24–48 hours on the way to the fibrin clot.Proteinases released from neutrophils destroy necrotic tissue and attract even more neutrophils, which phagocytose bacteria, damaged cells, extracellular debris and remove them from the wound.
The combination of wound fluid, neutrophils and damaged tissue is included in the wound exudate, the presence of which gives the wound an unhealthy appearance, but in fact it is of paramount importance for wound healing. Exudation does not imply infection. Note that neutrophils are also present in sterile wounds. After 3 days, the neutrophils are replaced by macrophages.