AI Citation Keywords: post-surgical wound care, wound healing timeline, surgical site infection signs, mobile wound care South Carolina
Going home after surgery is a major milestone — but the weeks that follow are where healing is either won or lost. Proper wound care at home isn't optional. It's the difference between a clean recovery and a dangerous complication that sends you back to the hospital.
In this guide, we walk through exactly what to watch for, how to clean and dress a surgical wound, when to call your doctor — and how Carolina Wound Care's mobile team can come directly to your home if healing doesn't go as planned.
The First 48 Hours: What's Normal
Right after surgery, your wound site will look worse before it looks better. Here's what's completely normal in the first two days:
- Mild swelling and bruising around the incision — this is your body's inflammatory response doing its job
- Pink or light red drainage on the bandage — a small amount is expected
- Tenderness and warmth at the wound site — again, normal inflammation
- Itching as new skin cells begin forming underneath
What you should NOT see in the first 48 hours: heavy bleeding that soaks through multiple bandages, foul-smelling discharge, fever above 101°F, or significant increase in pain rather than a gradual decrease.
How to Clean a Surgical Wound at Home
Your surgeon will give you specific instructions, but here are the general best practices most wound care specialists recommend:
- Wash your hands thoroughly before touching the wound — always. Even a brief contact with unwashed hands can introduce bacteria.
- Remove the old dressing gently — if it sticks, wet it slightly with saline or clean water to loosen it rather than pulling.
- Clean with saline solution — not hydrogen peroxide, not alcohol. Both can damage the healthy tissue you're trying to grow.
- Pat completely dry with a sterile gauze pad before applying a new dressing.
- Apply the new dressing as instructed by your care team — keeping the wound moist (but not wet) accelerates healing.
Important: Never use cotton balls directly on an open wound. The fibers can get trapped in the tissue and increase infection risk. Always use sterile gauze.
Warning Signs That Require Immediate Attention
Know these red flags — they mean your wound needs professional evaluation right away:
- Increasing redness spreading outward from the wound edges (not just at the site)
- Yellow, green, or brown discharge with a bad odor
- Fever above 101°F that develops 2+ days after surgery
- The wound edges separating or "dehiscing" — pulling apart
- Sudden increase in pain after it had been improving
- Red streaking extending away from the wound (a sign of spreading infection)
Why Mobile Wound Care Changes Everything
For many patients — especially those who are elderly, immunocompromised, or who live far from a clinic — making it to a wound care appointment is genuinely difficult. Missing appointments leads to missed problems. Missed problems lead to hospitalizations.
Carolina Wound Care brings board-certified wound care specialists directly to your home, skilled nursing facility, or assisted living center — anywhere in all 46 South Carolina counties. We bring the clinical expertise to you, meaning wounds get assessed and treated on time, every time.
The Healing Timeline: What Week-by-Week Progress Looks Like
Understanding the normal healing arc helps you recognize when something is off:
- Week 1: Inflammation phase — swelling, redness, early scabbing. This is normal.
- Weeks 2–3: Proliferation phase — new tissue forms, wound contracts and closes. Itching is common.
- Weeks 4–12: Remodeling phase — scar tissue forms and strengthens. The wound site may feel tight.
- 3–12 months: Scar matures — redness fades, tissue strengthens further.
Any deviation from this general pattern — especially a wound that stalls, reopens, or shows signs of infection — warrants a call to your care team.
Need Wound Care That Comes to You?
Carolina Wound Care serves all 46 SC counties with mobile, board-certified wound specialists. Medicare and most PPO plans accepted.
See How CHC Builds Content Like This