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Apex Nursing

Chart — Wound Care

NPIAP Pressure Injury Staging Chart

All 6 NPIAP pressure injury categories at a glance: skin findings, tissue involvement, key characteristics, and primary nursing action.

Data Source: NPIAP (National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel) Staging Definitions

Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Complete Staging Chart

StageSkin Intact?Skin FindingsTissue InvolvedKey CharacteristicPriority
Stage 1Yes — intactNon-blanchable erythema; warmth, firmness, or edema at site; may be purple/blue in dark skinEpidermis onlyBlanch test NEGATIVE. No skin breakdown. Reversible with prompt pressure relief.urgent
Stage 2No — partial thicknessShallow open wound (red/pink wound bed) OR intact/ruptured serum-filled blisterEpidermis + partial dermis. No adipose visible.NO slough, NO eschar, NO adipose visible. Clean wound bed. Serum blister (not blood-filled).priority
Stage 3No — full thicknessDeep wound with adipose visible; possible slough or eschar; possible undermining/tunnelingEpidermis + dermis + subcutaneous fat. Fascia NOT exposed.Adipose visible — fascia, muscle, bone NOT exposed. Depth varies by body location.critical
Stage 4No — full thicknessDeep wound with bone, muscle, tendon, or ligament visible or palpable; slough/eschar often presentEpidermis + dermis + fat + fascia + muscle/bone/tendon exposedBone, tendon, or muscle VISIBLE or PALPABLE. High osteomyelitis risk. Probe-to-bone test.critical
UnstageableVariable — surface may be intact under escharWound bed completely or partially covered by slough (yellow/tan) and/or eschar (dark brown/black)Unknown — cannot assess depth until debridedTRUE STAGE UNKNOWN. Is a Stage 3 or 4 underneath. Heel exception: do NOT debride dry, stable heel eschar.priority
DTPIIntact OR intact with thin blisterPersistent deep red, maroon, or purple discoloration OR blood-filled blister; pain and firmness preceding visible changeDeep tissue (muscle/fat at bone-muscle interface) — inside-out injury with potentially intact surfaceINSIDE-OUT INJURY. May evolve into Stage 3 or 4 rapidly. Warn family of potential worsening despite good care.critical

Stage Detail Cards

Stage 1

Yes — intact

Tissue: Epidermis only

Findings: Non-blanchable erythema; warmth, firmness, or edema at site; may be purple/blue in dark skin

Key: Blanch test NEGATIVE. No skin breakdown. Reversible with prompt pressure relief.

Action: Relieve pressure IMMEDIATELY. Reposition.

Stage 2

No — partial thickness

Tissue: Epidermis + partial dermis. No adipose visible.

Findings: Shallow open wound (red/pink wound bed) OR intact/ruptured serum-filled blister

Key: NO slough, NO eschar, NO adipose visible. Clean wound bed. Serum blister (not blood-filled).

Action: Moist wound healing (hydrocolloid or foam). Do NOT debride.

Stage 3

No — full thickness

Tissue: Epidermis + dermis + subcutaneous fat. Fascia NOT exposed.

Findings: Deep wound with adipose visible; possible slough or eschar; possible undermining/tunneling

Key: Adipose visible — fascia, muscle, bone NOT exposed. Depth varies by body location.

Action: Wound care specialist consult. Debridement, packing if undermining.

Stage 4

No — full thickness

Tissue: Epidermis + dermis + fat + fascia + muscle/bone/tendon exposed

Findings: Deep wound with bone, muscle, tendon, or ligament visible or palpable; slough/eschar often present

Key: Bone, tendon, or muscle VISIBLE or PALPABLE. High osteomyelitis risk. Probe-to-bone test.

Action: URGENT surgical consult. Rule out osteomyelitis. NPWT consideration.

Unstageable

Variable — surface may be intact under eschar

Tissue: Unknown — cannot assess depth until debrided

Findings: Wound bed completely or partially covered by slough (yellow/tan) and/or eschar (dark brown/black)

Key: TRUE STAGE UNKNOWN. Is a Stage 3 or 4 underneath. Heel exception: do NOT debride dry, stable heel eschar.

Action: Wound care consult for debridement plan. Reassess staging after debridement.

DTPI

Intact OR intact with thin blister

Tissue: Deep tissue (muscle/fat at bone-muscle interface) — inside-out injury with potentially intact surface

Findings: Persistent deep red, maroon, or purple discoloration OR blood-filled blister; pain and firmness preceding visible change

Key: INSIDE-OUT INJURY. May evolve into Stage 3 or 4 rapidly. Warn family of potential worsening despite good care.

Action: Relieve pressure IMMEDIATELY. Notify provider. Close monitoring for rapid evolution.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Stages 1 and 2 involve partial damage — Stage 1 is intact skin, Stage 2 is partial thickness
  • Stages 3 and 4 are full-thickness — adipose visible in Stage 3; bone/muscle/tendon visible in Stage 4
  • Unstageable = Stage 3 or 4 covered by slough/eschar — you CANNOT determine the stage
  • DTPI = inside-out injury — the visible area understates the damage. May look like Stage 1 but be Stage 4 underneath
  • Pressure injuries do NOT backstage — a healing Stage 4 remains 'Stage 4' in documentation
  • Only pressure injuries are staged using NPIAP criteria — venous, arterial, and diabetic ulcers are NOT staged this way
  • Heel eschar exception: dry, stable, intact heel eschar without infection signs = leave intact
  • Stage 1 in dark-skinned patients: look for warmth, edema, firmness, color change (purple, blue) — not just redness

Prevention — SSKIN Bundle

The SSKIN bundle is an evidence-based framework for preventing pressure injuries:

  • S — Surface: use an appropriate pressure-redistributing mattress or cushion.
  • S — Skin inspection: inspect skin at every care opportunity; document findings.
  • K — Keep moving: reposition every 2 hours (in a chair, every hour); use the 30° tilt; offload heels.
  • I — Incontinence / moisture: manage moisture, use barrier creams, and change pads promptly.
  • N — Nutrition / hydration: ensure adequate protein, calories, fluid, and micronutrients; refer to a dietitian if at risk.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with NPIAP (National Pressure Injury Advisory Panel) Staging Definitions. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →