Relations (1)

related 4.17 — strongly supporting 17 facts

Pain and redness are both identified as hallmark clinical signs of inflammation and wound infection, appearing together as symptoms in the inflammatory response [1], [2], [3], and [4].

Facts (17)

Sources
Healthy vs. Infected Wounds: A Clinician's Guide - Net Health nethealth.com Net Health 6 facts
referenceInfected wounds exhibit specific clinical characteristics: delayed healing or wound breakdown, friable or discolored granulation tissue, purulent drainage (yellow or green with potential foul odor), increased tissue hardening (induration), increased pain and tenderness, redness/swelling/warmth extending beyond wound margins, and potential systemic symptoms like fever, chills, or malaise.
claimAn infected wound is defined as a wound where harmful bacteria or other pathogens are replicating, characterized by signs such as increased pain, redness, swelling, pus-like drainage, delayed healing, fragile or discolored tissue, foul odor, or generalized signs of illness.
claimThe inflammation phase of wound healing is marked by expected symptoms of redness, swelling, warmth, and pain.
referenceHealthy wounds exhibit specific clinical characteristics: progressive reduction in size, robust 'beefy red' or pink moist granulation tissue, visible new skin growth, minimal or clear/yellowish drainage, decreasing pain over time, and redness/swelling that decreases as healing progresses.
claimIn normal wound healing, redness is localized, warmth is mild, swelling decreases progressively, and pain is proportional to the wound severity and diminishes over time.
claimInfected wounds are characterized by redness and swelling (edema) that spread beyond the wound margins, excessive warmth, and pain that worsens or remains unrelenting.
Inflammation: Types, symptoms, causes, and treatment medicalnewstoday.com Medical News Today 3 facts
claimAcute inflammation symptoms include pain (continuous or upon touch), redness (due to increased blood supply to capillaries), loss of function (difficulty moving or sensing), swelling (edema due to fluid buildup), and heat (due to increased blood flow).
claimAcute inflammation is triggered by injury, infection, or exposure to substances and presents as pain, redness, swelling, loss of function, and heat.
claimAcute inflammation is characterized by symptoms such as pain, redness, swelling, heat, and loss of function, though it can also present as 'silent' inflammation or cause systemic symptoms like fatigue and fever.
Wound Inflammation lakecountyin.gov Lake County Government 2 facts
claimLocal symptoms of wound inflammation include redness (erythema) caused by increased blood flow, swelling (edema) caused by fluid accumulation in tissues, heat caused by increased blood flow, and pain caused by the activation of pain receptors.
claimPro-inflammatory mediators such as prostaglandins and leukotrienes contribute to the symptoms of redness, heat, swelling, and pain during the inflammatory response.
Inflammation: Definition, Diseases, Types, and Treatment - WebMD webmd.com WebMD 1 fact
claimJoint inflammation can cause pain, stiffness, redness, warmth, and swelling in the affected area.
Parts of the Immune System | Children's Hospital of Philadelphia chop.edu Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 1 fact
claimPain, redness, and swelling at a wound site are indicative of the inflammatory response induced by macrophages.
In brief: What is an inflammation? - InformedHealth.org - NCBI - NIH ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) 1 fact
claimThe five classic symptoms of acute inflammation are redness, heat, swelling, pain, and loss of function.
Acute Inflammatory Response - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - NIH ncbi.nlm.nih.gov National Library of Medicine 1 fact
claimThe five signs of inflammation are pain, redness, swelling, heat, and loss of function.
Understanding the Inflammatory and Healing Process - Myo-Fit myofittherapy.com MyoFit Therapy 1 fact
claimThe hallmark signs of acute inflammation—redness, heat, swelling, and pain—are caused by increased blood flow and fluid accumulation at the injury site.
Wound healing stages: What to look for healthpartners.com HealthPartners 1 fact
claimSigns of a wound infection include swelling, redness, tenderness or pain that worsens or spreads, heat at the wound site, pus or liquid oozing, darkening of the skin at the wound edges, and a bad smell.