better term for "saggy eldery" skin?

Nursing Students General Students

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Sorry to ask a stupid question, but I'm typing up my first Skin Assessment. The client's skin is thickened-but-weakened saggy skin, not unusual for a 90something. It's no so much wrinkled as just loose. It doesn't tear easily but you can tell it's looser/weaker than the skin of a younger person.

For my assessment, I am required to use medical terms. I googled and checked my texts, but I can't find quite the right phrase. Help? :D

TIA for any suggestions.

Elasticless skin? LOL....I'm kidding, I don't know. Good luck!

Maybe "lacking turgor" or "inelastic" is good as CrunchyMama said. I got the image, but I'm not sure either. Nursing ought to require a minor in creative writing.

thanks for the ideas! :loveya:

I have a Medical to plain-English dictionary. I need one that goes the other direction.

Specializes in UR, oncology, L&D, IVTherapy.

Lack of turgor, thickened.

I would say skin turgor is poor

You want to include:

Color, temperature, turgor, Lesions (type, description, location), Edema (type, location), Pruritus (location)

Examples:

Skin is:

warm, cool, moist, dry, intact

color is:

pale, pink, dusky, cyanotic, jaundiced, mottled

turgor is:

firm, supple, dehydrated, fragile, edematous,

Specializes in Management, Emergency, Psych, Med Surg.

Well the surgeons I know who do lab band surgery just call it lose skin.

[h=1]Dermatochalasis[/h]

Specializes in Progressive Care Unit.
Dermatochalasis

Dermatochalasis is more for the eyelid skin/muscle, not for the general skin. Anyway, just to let you know, this thread is from 2009. :)

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