What is a first degree burn?
epidermis only, ie sunburn
What is are the two types of second-degree burns?
What are 3rd-degree burns?
through dermis, down to subcutaneous fat; leathery feeling (charred parchment); requires surgical debridement and graft
What are 4th-degree burns?
Down to bone, adjacent adipose tissue, or muscle tissue
What are admission criteria for 2nd and 3rd-degree burns?
Other than the dimensional/locational criteria for 2nd and 3rd-degree burns, what are some etiological/associated-injury criteria for burn admission?
Why are kids and elderly highest mortality?
difficulty escaping fire - longer exposure
What are most common types of burns?
scalds
What are the most common types of burns to come to the hospital and get admitted?
flame-burns
What is the rule of 9’s?
What is the Parkland formula?
Indications for escharotomy?
Lung injury from smoke caused by what?
carbonaceous materials and smoke, not heat
What are the risk factors for airway injury?
What are the signs and symptoms of possible airway injury?
Risks: EtOH, trauma, closed space, rapid combustion, delayed extrication
Signs: facial burns, wheezing, carbonaceous sputum
What are the indications for intubation in smoke lung injury?
upper airway stridor or obstruction, worsening hypoxemia
What is the most common infection in burn patients?
Pneumonia. Also most common cause of death
What do you do with acid and alkali burns?
What is the difference in the pathology of alkali vs acid burns?
What do you do with hydrofluoric acid burns?
spread calcium gluconate gel on wound
What do you do with powder burns?
wipe away before irrigation
What do you do with tar burns?
cool, then wipe away with a lipophilic solvent (Neosporin works)
What do you do with electrical burns?
How does lightning kill you?
cardiopulmonary arrest secondary to electrical paralysis of brainstem
In the first week of early excision burns…
When is skin graft contraindicated (bacteria)?
beta hemolytic strep + or bacteria >10^5