100% found this document useful (1 vote)
228 views4 pages

Burns PDF

- Burns are classified by depth and cause, with thermal burns making up 95% of cases. Scalds and flames account for most thermal burns. - Burn severity is determined by total body surface area (TBSA) affected, depth of burn, and location. Complications can include tissue hypoxia, infection, acute respiratory failure, and psychological effects. - Management involves airway protection, fluid resuscitation, analgesia, wound care, antibiotics if infected, surgery such as escharotomy or grafting, and referral to a burns center for severe or complicated cases. Outcomes depend on factors like age, TBSA, and presence of inhalation injury.

Uploaded by

Rifqi Ulil
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (1 vote)
228 views4 pages

Burns PDF

- Burns are classified by depth and cause, with thermal burns making up 95% of cases. Scalds and flames account for most thermal burns. - Burn severity is determined by total body surface area (TBSA) affected, depth of burn, and location. Complications can include tissue hypoxia, infection, acute respiratory failure, and psychological effects. - Management involves airway protection, fluid resuscitation, analgesia, wound care, antibiotics if infected, surgery such as escharotomy or grafting, and referral to a burns center for severe or complicated cases. Outcomes depend on factors like age, TBSA, and presence of inhalation injury.

Uploaded by

Rifqi Ulil
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Version 2.

1 Burns 15/03/2012

Epidemiology:
• In Aus/NZ - 220,000 cases/yr, 10% of these hospitalised, 0.02% fatal.
• Children<4y usually scalds
• Highest rates were young children & elderly.
• ~50% of burns and scalds occur in the kitchen.
Types:
• Thermal 95% - Scalds 60%, flame 40% • Chemical
• Electrical • Radiation
Systemic effects
• Cytokine release if burn SA>30%
• Release of TNFα
• ↑Capillary permeability
• ↓Myocardial contractility
• Peripheral & splanchnic vasoconstriction
• Bronchoconstriction
• ARDS if severe
• ↑Basal metabolic rate & basal body temperature (~0.03ºC per % BSA)
• ↓Humeral & cell mediated immunity
Assessment
History: AMPLE, When, what, how long, how hot (or concentrated for chemical), enclosed/open
space, explosion, other trauma. What first aid given.
Examination: Where burnt (esp airway – upper/lower signs, face, hands, genitals), how
extensive, approx depth.
Consider: NAI, EtOH/Drug use.
Burn Surface Area Estimation
Rule of Nines Or Lund & Browder Chart Or Hand Method
Child: For every
year of age >1yr
decrease head by
1% and increase
each leg by 0.5%

Age 0 1 5 10 15 Adult
A 9.5 8.5 6.5 5.5 4.5 3.5
B 2.75 3.25 4 4.5 4.5 4.75
C 2.5 2.5 2.75 3 3.25 3.5
Burn Depth Assessment
Depth Colour Blisters Capillary Refill Sensation Healing Scarring
Epidermal Red No Brisk 1-2s Painful Within 7d None
(Superficial)
Superficial Dermal Red/Pale Pink Small Brisk 1-2s Painful Within 14d None, sl. colour
(Superficial Partial) mismatch
Mid-Dermal Dark Pink Present Sluggish >2s Painful 2-3 weeks Yes (if healing
(Partial) ± Grafting >3wk)
Deep Dermal Blotchy Red/ +/- Sluggish >2s or Variable Grafting Yes
(Deep Partial) White absent required
Full Thickness White/Brown/ No Absent Absent Grafting Yes
Black/Deep Red required

Burn Severity
TBSA, depth & site (airway, face, hands/feet, genitals), skin thickness (thinner in old/young)
Complications
• Tissue hypoxia – low O2, CO, CN-, H2S • Hypothermia
• Infection esp Pseudomonas spp. • SIADH
• ARF (hypovolaemia, myoglobinuria, sepsis) • Scarring
• ARDS • Psychological effects
Investigations
Urine: ?haemoglobin/myoglobin, output
Bloods: ABG, COHb (±CN/H2S), FBC, UEC, Anion gap, LFT, CK, CMP (esp chemical burns e.g. HF)
ECG: ?myocardial injury
Imaging: CXR if ?inhalation injury, bronchoscopy if airway injury, IV Xenon lung scan
Management
First Aid:
• Stop, drop, cover face & roll if on fire
• 20min+ cold (15ºC) running water(not ice) if <3hrs of burn. BurnAid. Cover with Glad wrap.
• Keep rest of body warm to prevent hypothermia
• Remove clothing and jewellery
• Apply C-spine collar if appropriate
Resuscitation
• Airway: May intubate with suxamethonium if burn <5d old else rocuronium.
o Intubate immed if impending airway obs, hypoxia on 100% O2, hypoventilation
o Intubate urgently if ↓SaO2 on 60-100% O, voice change, oral erythema/blistering
o Early ETT if ?inhalation burn: orofacial burn, carbonaceous sputum, nasal
hair/eyebrow singing.
• Breathing: Humidified O2.
• Circulation: 2 x IVC if major burn. Try to avoid burnt tissue if possible. Aim for urine
output of 0.5-1ml/kg/hr in adults, 1-2ml/kg/hr in children.
o Fluids: No evidence for colloid over crystalloid. If TBSA>15% (Child: 10%) use
Hartmann’s init rate (Parklands): Total 2º/3º BSA (%) x Wt (kg) x 3-4mL. Give 1/2
in 1st 8h, rest over 16h. Add maintenance fluids for child<30kg.
o If low urine output, & not responsive to ↑fluids, can use mannitol + frusemide.
Analgesia: Cooling, wrapping to air currents. PO paracetamol/codeine if minor, opioids e.g.
morphine 0.1mg/kg IV (not IM – variable absorption) if larger.
Blisters: Controversial. Leave small blisters intact. Debride if large, over joints or ?infected.
Dressings:
• Superficial:
o Mepitel (low adherent silicone gel + flexible polyamide net) with Melolin or
hydrocolloids (Duoderm, Comfeel). Secure with Hyperfix or Fixomull.
o If no dressing - Solosite/Solugel and Intrasite gels good to reduce discomfort.
• Partial thickness:
o Acticoat or Acticoat-7 (Init soak, then q6h moistening with water (not saline) to
keep Ag release & prevent adherence to burn). Alternatively Mepilex Ag (doesn’t
req moistening & has slower Ag release – less stinging). Secure as above. In Ag-
sensitive patients use Bactigras (Chlorhexidine impregnated Vaseline gauze) +
secondary absorptive dressing. Redress burn q3-7d depending on dressing used.
o Facial/genital burns: cleaned bd & Vaseline gauze/white paraffin ± 2% mupirocin
o Burns over joints may require splinting (esp children).
o Silvazine (SSD): Silver Sulphadiazine 1% + Chlorhexidine Gluconate 0.2% + 2°
absorptive dressing. Less favoured now. Can change burn appearance/stain skin.
• Full thickness:
o Glad wrap prior to transfer & r/v at Burns Centre.
Antibiotics: Not routinely for prophylaxis, unless v. severe. Give if signs of infection.
Other Mx: Tetanus IG/prophylaxis, SW/CPU if NAI. Vitamins, TPN, stress ulceration
prophylaxis esp if large TBSA. Physio. Psych input if scarred/PTSD.
Surgery:
• Escharotomy: Incision of burnt tissue down
into fat. Circumferential full thickness
burns to limbs (longitudinal), chest (2 ant
axillary line lateral cuts joined by 2
transverse cuts at 2ics & costal margin) or
neck.
• Fasciotomy: Occ req with assoc skeletal
trauma, crush injury, high-voltage electrical
injury or if involving tissue beneath the
investing fascia.
• Grafting: Full thickness. Cosmetic rev.
Burns Centre Referral Criteria:
• Partial thickness >10% TBSA, full thickness
>5% TBSA
• Child partial/full thickness >5% TBSA
• Priority areas: face/neck, hands, feet,
perineum, genitalia and major jts.
• Any circumferential burn.
• Burns by chemical, electricity, lightning
• Burns with concomitant trauma or pre-
existing medical condition.
• Burns with associated inhalation injury.
• Suspected non-accidental injury.
• Pregnancy with cutaneous burns.
Ongoing care: Burns dressing clinic, plastics r/v, moisturiser, sun-block, antihistamine (itch)
Prognosis:
Mortality RF: Age>60, TBSA>40%, inhalation injury.
Mortality related to no. RF: 0 (0.3%), 1 (3%), 2 (33%), 3 (90%)
Fires
Components of injury: Flame burns, hypoxia (O2 depleted by combustion), hyperpyrexia, toxic
gases (CO, CN-, H2S), inhalational injury – smoke particles <0.5µm → inflame alveoli.
Chemical Burns
• Can result from exposure to acids, alkalis, or petroleum products.
• Alkali burns (liquefaction) tend to be deeper than acid burns (coagulative necrosis).
• Remove clothing with care and if dry powder still present on skin, brush it away.
• Flush away the chemical with large amounts of water for at least 20-30min. Alkali burns
to the eye require longer continuous irrigation until pH normalised.
Cement Burns: Calcium oxide→hydroxide (alkali) on exposure to sweat/water. Mx: irrigation.
Tar Burns: Bitumen laid at 200°C. Adheres to tissue→prolonged contact. Mx: soak in cold water
then olive oil & remove tar carefully. Split tar in circumferential burn (as contracts on cooling).
Hydrofluoric Acid: See Toxicology Article & Antidote article.
Electrical burns
See Electrical Injury article
• Are often more serious than they appear on the surface.
• Rhabdomyolysis → myoglobin release, which may → ARF.
o Rx: Fluids (so urine output>1.5ml/kg/hr), bicarbonate/mannitol/frusemide.
Sunburn
Common from UV radiation.
Risk factors: Duration & timing of sun exposure, UV-B >UV -A, but less prevalent in sunlight,
lack of sunscreens, lighter or lack of skin pigmentation, moist skin, less atmospheric filtration
with height/ozone depletion, snow/sand/water glare (cf Arc Eye).
Presentation: Usually superficial burns, occ partial thickness with blistering. Systemic
symptoms can accompany severe burns with headache, chills, malaise +/- nausea & vomiting.
Management
• Mild: Cool soaks and PO/topical NSAIDs may be helpful.
• Moderate: Lack of good evidence for PO NSAIDs, antihistamines and TOP steroids,
antioxidants, or emollients.
• Severe: As for any other severe burn.
Complications
• Premature aging, solar keratoses, BCC, SCC and malignant melanoma
• Maybe associated with heatstroke or other heat-related illnesses
• Photosensitivity reactions or exacerbation of dermatological conditions
Prevention: Education, sun block/sunscreen with high SPF, limiting sun exposure. Slip, slap, slop.
Ionising Radiation
Iatrogenic, terrorist attack, nuclear accident. LD50=4 Gray.
Tissue sensitivity: Gonads > marrow, lung & GIT > breast, liver, thyroid, bladder > bone & skin.
Features: Early N&V (↑sev), burns after 48h, ↓↓marrow (>2Gy), colitis (>10Gy), pneumonitis, RF,
liver failure. High doses (>15Gy): fatal vascular & cerebral syndromes. Decontam. Specialist Mx.

You might also like