Burns and Suturing Flashcards

1
Q

Describe one aspect of an erythema (sunburn).

A

Red. Brisk capillary refill. Skin is dry and intact. No blisters. Painful.

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2
Q

Describe one aspect of a superficial partial thickness.

A

Pale pink/red. Brisk capillary refill. Exudate present. Intact/collapsed blisters. Pain.

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3
Q

State 4 different types of burns/suturing.

A

Superficial/erythema. Superficial partial thickness. Deep dermal. Full thickness.

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4
Q

Describe one characteristic of a deep dermal burn.

A

Dark pink/red or white. Mottled, stained, cherry red. Delayed or absent. Capillary refill. Dull/variable sensation.

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5
Q

Describe one characteristic of a full thickness burn.

A

White, black, brown or yellow. Dry and leathery. Thrombosed vessels may be visible. Eschar may be present. No capillary refill. No sensation.

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6
Q

State 2 parts to an assessment.

A

Assess. Cover.

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7
Q

What 2 parts do you assess?

A

Extent of the burn. Depth of the burn (partial thickness - painful, red, blistered; full thickness - insensate/painless, grey-white).

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8
Q

What is meant by cover?

A

Loose longitudinal strips. Chemical injuries must be fully decontaminated.

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9
Q

Describe a feature of airways - inhalation injury.

A

Respiratory distress. Voice changes. Signs of upper airway oedema. Deep facial burns. Sooty sputum. History of burn in enclosed organ.

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10
Q

State a feature of breathing.

A

Suspect smoke inhalation injury (if raised COHb level). Administer 100% flow oxygen if carbon monoxide injury suspected. Establish baseline ABG’s and SaO2 (greater than 95%).

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11
Q

State a feature of the circulation assessment.

A

Insert 2 large bore peripheral IV lines. Take baseline bloods (e.g. U&E, FBC, LFT, CRP, amylase, CK, X-match, Drug/Toxicity). Discuss the need for escharotomy (surgical division of tough elastic, burnt tissue) - treats full thickness circumferential burns.

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12
Q

State a feature of the disability score.

A

Assess pain score. Administer IV opiate analgesia.

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13
Q

State a feature of the fluids.

A

Assess patient’s weight. Use the Parkland formula to estimate fluid resus requirements from time of injury, administer warmed Hartmann’s. Insert urinary catheter and titrate fluids to urine output (adult, children, electrical).

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14
Q

Define the Parkland formula.

A

4ml x Body Surface Area (%) x weight (kg)

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15
Q

State 3 features of toxic shock syndrome/burns sepsis syndrome.

A

Temperature > 38 degrees. Rash. Diarrhoea and vomiting. General malaise. Not eating or drinking. Tachycardia/tachypnoea. Hypotension. Reduced urine output.

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16
Q

State an objective of wound management.

A

Preserve viable tissue. Restore tissue and continuity and function. Reduce infection. Minimise scar tissue.

17
Q

State an evaluation of wound management.

A

Time of incident. Size of wound. Depth of wound. Position of joint. Tendon/nerve involvement. Bleeding at the site.

18
Q

Give an example of a type of wound.

A

Incision. Laceration. Puncture. Bite. Burn. Deglowing. Abrasion.

19
Q

State one aspect of the history of a patient requiring wound management.

A

Diabetic. Age > 50. Chronic alcoholic. HIV, chronic steroids. Peripheral vascular disease. Prosthetic cardiac valve.

20
Q

State an example of a wound closure.

A

Hair ties. Steristrips e.g. lacerations under little tension/forehead. Tissue adhesive - not below surface of skin, over joints. Staples. Suture - absorbable/non-absorbable.

21
Q

State the steps to wound management.

A

1) Inspection
2) Preparation
3) Anaesthesia - lignocaine (lidocaine) or bupivacaine (anaesthetic)
4) Irrigation - remove out dead, fragmented tissue using fluid
5) Exploration
6) Debridement - removal of foreign matter, bacteria and devitalized tissue
7) Closure
8) Dressings