Chronic Wounds
At Windy City Wound Care, we specialize in the diagnosis and management of chronic wounds—wounds that have failed to progress through the normal healing stages in a timely, orderly fashion.
What Is a Chronic Wound?
A chronic wound is one that does not follow the expected progression of healing and instead stalls or refuses to heal within an expected timeframe. Common signs include:
- Wounds present for several weeks (4–12 weeks or more) without significant improvement
- Persistent inflammation or deterioration instead of healing
- Underlying factors such as vascular disease, diabetes, pressure, or infection
Common Types & Causes
We routinely treat chronic wounds arising from a variety of causes, including:
- Venous leg ulcers – related to poor venous circulation
- Arterial (ischemic) ulcers – due to insufficient blood flow
- Diabetic foot ulcers / neuropathic wounds – nerve damage and impaired circulation
- Pressure injuries – wounds over bony areas in immobile patients
- Post-surgical or traumatic wounds that fail to heal as expected
Underlying risk factors we address include advanced age, diabetes, smoking, obesity, poor nutrition, and compromised circulation.
Why Prompt Specialist Care Matters
Chronic wounds aren’t just stubborn—they carry serious risks: infection, tissue loss, prolonged pain, reduced mobility, and in severe cases, amputation or systemic complications. Because healing has stalled, successful treatment requires a comprehensive assessment and targeted interventions rather than simple dressing changes.
Our Approach
Here’s how we treat chronic wounds at Windy City Wound Care:
1. Comprehensive Assessment
- Detailed evaluation of wound location, size, depth, tissue type, and surrounding skin
- Review of nutritional status, blood sugar, circulation, and infection risk
- Diagnostic studies when needed (vascular imaging, cultures, ABI tests)
2. Individualized Treatment Plan
- Debridement of non-viable tissue to allow new growth
- Moisture-balanced dressings and advanced wound materials
- Infection control and targeted therapy
- Addressing underlying causes like pressure, circulation, or diabetes
- Regular progress monitoring and documentation
3. Advanced Therapies
- Negative-pressure wound therapy
- Skin substitutes and advanced dressings
- Coordination with vascular surgeons, podiatrists, or endocrinologists
4. Patient Education & Prevention
- Teaching proper at-home wound care and infection signs
- Preventing recurrence through offloading, compression, and nutrition
Contact Us
Complete this form or call 708-497-9850 for a phone consultation.
