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Apex Nursing

Chart — Wound Care

Wound Drainage Chart

Wound drainage type, appearance, typical meaning, and nursing action at a glance. Includes exudate amount descriptors for accurate documentation.

Data Source: WOCN Society / Wound Healing Society

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.

Drainage Type Overview

TypeAppearanceMeaningBest DressingPriority
SerousClear, watery, pale yellow to straw-coloredNormal — inflammatory phase exudate. Serum without significant blood or infection.Light — hydrocolloid, transparent film, thin foamroutine
SanguineousBright red, bloodyActive bleeding from wound capillaries. Normal immediately post-injury, post-debridement, or with new wounds.Alginate (hemostatic) or absorptive foammonitor
SerosanguineousPink to salmon-coloredMOST COMMON expected drainage in healing wounds. Normal during inflammatory and early proliferative phases.Moderate absorber — foam, hydrocolloid, non-adherentroutine
PurulentThick, opaque — yellow, green, tan, or brown; may have foul odorINFECTION — bacterial colonization producing purulent exudate. Never normal in any wound.Antimicrobial (silver, iodine) + absorptive foam or alginatecritical

Drainage Type Detail & Nursing Actions

Serous Drainage

Clear, watery, pale yellow to straw-coloredWatery, thin

routine

Typical meaning: Normal — inflammatory phase exudate. Serum without significant blood or infection.

When concerning: Large amounts may indicate infection, lymph involvement, or hypoproteinemia

Nursing Actions

  • Document type and amount
  • Continue current wound care plan
  • Light absorber dressing (hydrocolloid, transparent film, thin foam) if present
  • Notify provider if amount increases significantly or becomes purulent

Dressing: Light — hydrocolloid, transparent film, thin foam

Sanguineous Drainage

Bright red, bloodyWatery to slightly viscous

monitor

Typical meaning: Active bleeding from wound capillaries. Normal immediately post-injury, post-debridement, or with new wounds.

When concerning: Heavy or persistent sanguineous drainage in an established wound = vessel disruption or inadequate hemostasis

Nursing Actions

  • Apply pressure if actively bleeding
  • Assess cause — was debridement performed? Is there trauma to wound?
  • Consider alginate dressing (hemostatic properties)
  • Notify provider if heavy, continuous, or unexpected sanguineous drainage

Dressing: Alginate (hemostatic) or absorptive foam

Serosanguineous Drainage

Pink to salmon-coloredWatery, thin — serum mixed with small amount of blood

routine

Typical meaning: MOST COMMON expected drainage in healing wounds. Normal during inflammatory and early proliferative phases.

When concerning: Sudden increase in amount may indicate wound re-injury or dehiscence

Nursing Actions

  • Document type and amount
  • Reassure patient — this is normal
  • Moderate absorber (foam, hydrocolloid, non-adherent) based on volume
  • Monitor for change in type or amount

Dressing: Moderate absorber — foam, hydrocolloid, non-adherent

Purulent Drainage

Thick, opaque — yellow, green, tan, or brown; may have foul odorThick, viscous

critical

Typical meaning: INFECTION — bacterial colonization producing purulent exudate. Never normal in any wound.

When concerning: ALWAYS concerning — requires immediate action

Nursing Actions

  • NOTIFY PROVIDER — purulent drainage always requires evaluation
  • Obtain wound culture before initiating antibiotics per order
  • Begin or initiate antimicrobial dressings per order (silver, iodine-based)
  • Assess for systemic infection signs: fever, elevated WBC, increasing erythema, warmth, tenderness
  • Document amount, color, odor, and surrounding wound/periwound findings

Dressing: Antimicrobial (silver, iodine) + absorptive foam or alginate

Exudate Amount Documentation

Amount TermDescription
None / DryNo visible exudate on wound or dressing
ScantFaint traces only on inner dressing surface
Small / MinimalCovers <25% of dressing surface area
ModerateCovers 25–75% of dressing surface area
Large / CopiousCovers >75% of dressing; may saturate through

Documentation example: “Moderate serosanguineous drainage, approximately 50% saturation of inner foam dressing.”

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with WOCN Society / Wound Healing Society. 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 →