Nearly any wound type. Nearly any location.
PWS treats many types of wounds, including wounds caused by diabetes, swelling, pressure, surgery, trauma, poor circulation, infection risk, and complex medical conditions.
Every wound is different, and successful healing often depends on identifying why the wound started and what is preventing it from closing. Select a condition below to learn more.
Diabetic Foot Ulcers
Nerve damage, reduced sensation, and circulation changes from diabetes can turn a small foot wound into a serious complication without the right care.
Learn more →Venous Leg Ulcers
Chronic swelling and venous insufficiency can lead to skin breakdown, drainage, and recurrent leg ulcers that need ongoing, coordinated management.
Learn more →Pressure Injuries
Pressure injuries can develop quickly when mobility, moisture, and nutrition combine against the skin — and they require both wound treatment and a plan to relieve pressure.
Learn more →Surgical Wounds
Some surgical wounds need additional monitoring, dressing management, or debridement beyond what a typical post-op visit provides.
Learn more →Traumatic Wounds
Trauma-related wounds vary widely in depth, contamination risk, and complexity, and treatment is guided by the specifics of the injury and the patient's overall health.
Learn more →Burns
Certain burns benefit from ongoing wound management, infection monitoring, and a clear plan for escalation if depth or severity requires a higher level of care.
Learn more →Arterial / Ischemic Wounds
When blood flow to the lower legs and feet is reduced, wounds can struggle to heal and complication risk rises — these wounds often need coordinated vascular evaluation.
Learn more →Chronic / Non-Healing Wounds
A wound that isn't progressing after several weeks often needs a fresh look at what's preventing it from closing, not just a new dressing.
Learn more →