BURNS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 65
About This Presentation
Title:

BURNS

Description:

Electrocardiogram. particularly important for patient more than 45 ... Prolonged QT interval on electrocardiogram is a reliable indicator of hypocalcemia. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:427
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: basicSh
Category:
Tags: burns

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: BURNS


1
BURNS
2
Topics to be Covered
  • Definition
  • Initial management
  • Emergent or shock phase
  • Assessment of inhalation injury
  • Assessment of burn severity and extent
  • Wound management
  • Burn infection
  • Electrical burn
  • Chemical burns
  • Summary

3
Definition
  • Burn
  • Thermal
  • Scald
  • Contact
  • Electrical
  • Chemical
  • Radiation

4
Initial Management I
  • STOP THE BURNING PROCESS
  • Water for smoldering clothing
  • Water for chemical burns
  • Remove clothing - keep warm
  • Cool water for small 2 burns only

5
Initial Management II
  • ASSURE ADEQUACY OF VENTILATION AND OXYGENATION
  • Provide oxygen for all burns to treat carbon
    monoxide
  • Consider early endotracheal intubation with smoke
    inhalation injury

6
Initial Management III
  • Initiate restoration of HEMODYNAMIC stability
    systemically locally
  • Isotonic crystalloid infusion
  • Remove any constricting items
  • Consider escharotomy for circumferential burns

7
Initial Management IV
  • Look for other traumatic injuries

8
Initial Management V
  • Burn wound last priority

9
Skin
10
Burn Wound Depth
First degree
Superficial second
Deep second
Third degree
11
Burn Wound Depth
12
Burn Wound Depth
13
Superficial second degree burn
14
Burn Wound Depth
15
Deep second degree burn
16
Burn Wound Depth
17
Third degree burn
18
Animation of burn wound depth
19
Estimating Burn Extent
  • Rule of Nine's - in increments of 9 BSA
  • entire upper limb
  • anterior or posterior surface of one lower limb
  • 1/2 of the anterior or posterior surface of the
    trunk
  • total head and neck (adult)
  • Lund Browder Chart emphasizes the relatively
    larger head size in
  • in infancy (largest)
  • childhood (larger)
  • adulthood (normal)
  • Patient's palm size in children represents 1 -
    1.25

20
Notes of Nines
21
Chinese nines
22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
Emergent or Shock Phase
  •  Increased Vascular Permeability
  • Altered microcirculation from direct heat injury
    and inflammation
  • Time course 
  • Peak shift 3-8 hrs
  • Continuous 2 days
  • increased proteins permeability leading to large
    plasma leak
  • Hypovolemia
  • Edema formation 
  • Edema increases tissue pressure (need for
    escharotomy) 
  • Resorption over next 5-7 days (can cause
    hypervolemia)

25
After thermal injury
Edema
  • Hypovolemia ? Fluid resuscitation
  • Crystalloid
  • Crystalloid colloid

26
Formula for Fluid Resuscitation I
For adult
27
Formula for Fluid Resuscitation II
For adult with extensive deep burn
28
Formula for Fluid Resuscitation III
For child
29
Monitoring Guidelines
  • Pulse young patient
  • Pulse less than 120, reasonable perfusion pulse
    gt 130, increase fluid
  • Elderly or with heart disease pulse not
    accurate reflection of perfusion
  • Electrocardiogram
  • particularly important for patient more than 45
    years old
  • Urine output
  • 0.5 to 1 cc/kg/hr is adequate in absence of
    diuretic such as alcohol
  • Exception Myoglobin or hemoglobinuria where over
    1cc/kg/hr is indicated
  • Base deficit
  • gt 5 meq / liter reflects decreased tissue
    oxygenation. Look for progressive decrease in
    base deficit as marker of adequacy of
    resuscitation.
  • Peripheral perfusion
  • For systemic circulation
  • For circumferential arm, leg burns

30
Vital signs
Fluid infusion 1.5ml for adult 1.75ml for
children 2.0ml for infant X burn X kg BW
Renal
Circulation
Urine Output 0.5-1.0ml/kg BW/hr
Adjustable
31
Wound management I
  • Superficial second degree burns
  • Do not move the blisters and do try to keep the
    outer of the blisters intact.
  • Do not change the dressing too frequently unless
    the dressing is odor the wound is infected

32
Wound management II
  • Deep second degree burns
  • Apply 1 silver sulfadiazine cream to the wound
  • Change dressing daily
  • Apply the 10 sulfamylon cream to the infected
    wound

33
Wound management III
  • Third degree burnsduring the early stage
  • Admit as edema process may require escharotomies
  • apply 1 silver sulfadiazine cream with dressing
  • Change dressing daily
  • Apply 10 sulfamylon cream to the infected wound
  • Operation
  • Tangential excision
  • Fascia excision
  • Skin grafting

34
Special Area
  • Apply topical antibiotic ointment or cream
    followed by soft gauze dressing
  • Face treat open
  • Perineum treat open
  • Meets criteria for Burn Center due to high risk
    location

35
Burn Infection I
  • Wound infection
  • Invasive infection
  • Burn wound sepsis the quantity of bacteria in
  • the tissue underneath eschar 105/g
  • Systemic infection

36
Burn Infection II
  • Irritable, disorienting, hallucinating,
    persecutory delusion, apathy
  • Shivering High fever or hypothermia
  • Tachycardia
  • Tachypnea
  • Deterioration of the burn wound
  • The count of WBC higher or lower than that in
    normal range

37
Burn Infection III
  • Excision of deep burn wounds and covering the
    excised wound during early stage
  • Antibiotics
  • Nutrition and systemic support

38
Electrical Burn I
  • Resistance
  • Resistance is a measure of how difficult it is
    for electrons to pass through a material and is
    expressed in a unit of measurement termed an ohm.
  • The amount of heat developed by a conductor
    varies directly with its resistance.

39
Ohms Law
  • The relationship between current flow
    (amperage), pressure (voltage), and resistance is
    described in Ohms law, which states that the
    amount of current flowing through a conductor is
    directly proportional to voltage and inversely
    related to resistance.
  • Current (I) Voltage (E)/Resistance (R)

40
Joules Law
  • Power (watts) lost as a result of the current
    passage through a material provides a measure of
    the amount of heat generated and can be
    determined by Joules law
  • Power (P) Voltage (E) x Current (I)

41
Body Resistance I
  • The callused palm may reach 1,000,000 ohms/cm2,
    while the average resistance of dry normal skin
    is 5000 ohms/cm2 decrease to 1000 ohms/cm2 if
    hands are wet.
  • The stratum corneum that serves as an insulator
    for the body Exposure of the skin to 50 volts for
    6-7 seconds results in blisters that have a
    considerably diminished resistance.

42
Body Resistance II
  • The dermis offers low resistance, as do almost
    all internal tissues except bone, which is a poor
    conductor of electricity.
  • Bone has a high resistance, thus readily
    transforms current to heat production, which may
    result in periosteal necrosis or even melting of
    the calcium phosphate matrix.

43
Electric Arc
  • Contact with high-voltage current may be
    associated with an arc or light flash
  • Temperature of the ionized particles and
    immediately surrounding gases of the arc can be
    as high as 4000C (7232F) and can melt bone and
    volatilize metal. As a general guide, arcing
    amounts to several centimeters for each 10,000
    volts.

44
Effects of Electricity On the Body
  • Effects of electricity on the body are
    determined by 7 factors (1) type of current, (2)
    amount of current, (3) pathway of current, (4)
    duration of contact, (5) area of contact, (6)
    resistance of the body, and (7) voltage.
    Low-voltage electric currents that pass through
    the body have well-defined physiologic effects
    that are usually reversible. For a 1-second
    contact time, a current of 1 milliampere (mA) is
    the threshold of perception, a current of 10-15
    mA causes sustained muscular contraction, a
    current of 50-100 mA results in respiratory
    paralysis and ventricular fibrillation, and a
    current of more than 1000 mA leads to sustained
    myocardial contractions.

45
Tetanizing Effect
  • A level of alternating current is
    reached for which the subject cannot release the
    grasp of the conductor. This tetanizing effect on
    voluntary muscles is most pronounced in the
    frequency range of 15-150 Hz.

46
Factors Found To Be of Primary
  • ventricular fibrillation is inversely
    proportional to the square root of the importance
    are duration of current flow and body weight. The
    threshold for shock duration and directly
    proportional to body weight. When the heart is
    exposed to currents of increasing strength, its
    susceptibility to fibrillation first increases
    and then decreases with even stronger currents.
    At relatively high currents (1-5 amps), the
    likelihood of ventricular fibrillation is
    negligible with the heart in sustained
    contraction. If this high current is terminated
    soon after electric shock, the heart reverts to
    normal sinus rhythm. In cardiac defibrillation,
    these same high currents are applied to the chest
    to
  • depolarize the entire heart.

47
High-voltage Accidents
  • In high-voltage accidents, the victims
    usually do not continue to grasp the conductor.
    Often, they are thrown away from the electric
    circuit, which leads to traumatic injuries (eg,
    fracture, brain hemorrhage). The infrequency with
    which sustained muscular contractions occur with
    high-voltage injury apparently occurs because the
    circuit is completed by arcing before the victim
    touches the contact.

48
Low-voltage Electric Burns
  • Low-voltage electric burns almost exclusively
    involve either the hands or oral cavity. In
    either injury, hospitalization is recommended to
    treat the local burn injury and monitor for
    systemic sequelae.

49
Current Pathways I
  • Low-voltage current generally
    follows the path of least resistance (ie, nerves,
    blood vessels), yet high-voltage current takes a
    direct path between entrance and ground. The
    volume of soft tissue through which current flows
    behaves as a single uniform conductor, thus is a
    more important determinant of tissue injury than
    the internal resistance of the individual
    tissues. Current is concentrated at its entrance
    to the body, then diverges centrally, and finally
    converges before exiting.

50
Current Pathways II
  • Consequently, anatomic locations of the
    contact sites are critical determinants of
    injury. Most of this underlying tissue damage,
    especially muscle, occurs at the time of initial
    insult and does not appear to be progressive.
    Microscopic studies of electric burns demonstrate
    that this initial destruction of tissues is not
    uniform. Areas of total thermal destruction are
    mixed with apparently viable tissue. Between the
    entrance and exit points of the electric current,
    widespread anatomic damage and destruction may be
    seen. An electric current can injure almost every
    organ system.

51
Entry and Exit Wounds
  • Between the entrance and exit points of
    the electric current, widespread anatomic damage
    and destruction may be seen.

52
Initial Management of Electrical Burn
  • If disconnecting the victim from the
    electric circuit does not restore pulses, the
    first responder must start cardiopulmonary
    resuscitation to restore breathing and
    circulation.

53
Systemic Complications
  • Peripheral nerve injury
  • cardiac injury
  • Vascular damage
  • Eye injuries
  • A wide range of voltages, from 220-50,000 volts,
    results in a cataract in 6 of electric injuries.
    Time of onset of the symptoms ranges from 3 weeks
    to 2 years. Lesions of the cornea, fundus, and
    optic nerve, without alteration of the lens, also
    have been reported.

54
Systemic Complications
  • Severe potassium deficiency is an
    unexplained manifestation of high-voltage
    electric injury. This problem was identified in
    patients with normal renal function who were
    eating well 2-4 weeks after injury. In these
    patients, respiratory arrest and severe cardiac
    arrhythmias may lead to the diagnosis.

55
Chemical Burns I
  • Chemical injuries are commonly encountered
    following exposure to acids and alkali, including
    hydrofluoric acid, formic acid, anhydrous
    ammonia, cement, and phenol. Other specific
    chemical agents that cause chemical burns include
    white phosphorus, elemental metals, nitrates,
    hydrocarbons(?), and tar.

56
Chemical Burns II
  • Chemical burns continue to destroy tissue
    until causative agent is inactivated or removed.
    For example, when hydrotherapy is initiated
    within 1 minute after skin contact with either an
    acid or alkali, severity of the skin injury is
    far less than when treatment is delayed for 3
    minutes. When contact time exceeds 1 hour, pH of
    a sodium hydroxide (NaOH) burn cannot be
    reversed. Similarly, brief washing of a
    hydrochloric acid (HCl) burn more than 15 minutes
    after exposure does not significantly alter
    acidity of damaged skin.

57
Water is the Agent of Choice
  • Water is the agent of choice for decontaminating
    acid and alkali skin burns.
  • Deleterious effects of attempting to neutralize
    acid and alkali burns were first noted in
    experimental animals in 1927. In every instance,
    animals with alkali or acid burns that were
    washed with water survived longer than animals
    treated with chemical neutralizers.
  • The additional trauma of the heat generated by
    the neutralization reaction superimposed on the
    already existing burn accounts for the striking
    difference between the results of these two
    treatment methods.
  • The same effect may occur when certain chemicals
    contact water, yet large volumes of water tend to
    limit this exothermic reaction.

58
Notes Of Hydrotherapy
  • Because contact time is a critical determinant
    of severity of injury, for skin exposed to a
    toxic liquid chemical, an exposed person or a
    witness to the injury must initiate hydrotherapy
    immediately.
  • When workers clothes are soaked with such agents,
    valuable time is lost if their clothing is
    removed before copious washing commences.
  • Gentle irrigation with a large volume of water
    under low pressure for a long time dilutes the
    toxic agent and washes it out of the skin.
  • During hydrotherapy, rescuer should remove the
    patients clothes the rescuer should wear rubber
    gloves to prevent hand contact with chemical.

59
Hydrofluoric Acid
  • Significant local and systemic toxicity can
    result from exposures of eye, skin, or lung to HF
  • Inhalation of HF vapor is rare and usually
    involves explosions that produce fumes or high
    concentrations of liquid HF (gt50) that soak the
    clothing of the upper body. Patient outcomes vary
    considerably depending on concentration and
    duration of exposure to HF.
  • Inhalation and skin exposure to 70 HF has caused
    pulmonary edema and death within 2 hours.
  • Pulmonary injuries that are not evident until
    several days after exposure also can occur. The
    patient has no respiratory symptoms and a normal
    chest radiograph initially, yet massive purulent
    tracheobronchitis that is refractory to treatment
    may develop.
  • HF binds calcium and magnesium with strong
    affinity. Systemic fluoride toxicity, including
    dysrhythmias and hypocalcemia, can occur from
    ingestion, inhalation, or dermal exposure to HF.

60
Treatment of HF burn
  • all patients with significant HF exposure should
    be hospitalized and monitored for cardiac
    dysrhythmias and electrolyte status for 24-48
    hours.
  • If left untreated, a burn caused by 7 mL of 99
    HF can theoretically bind all available calcium
    in a 70-kg man. Prolonged QT interval on
    electrocardiogram is a reliable indicator of
    hypocalcemia.
  • Hypocalcemia can occur after significant
    exposures to HF and should be corrected with 10
    calcium gluconate administered IV.

61
Phosphorus Burn
  • White phosphorus is a yellow, waxy,
    translucent solid element that burns in air
    unless preserved in oil.

62
Tissue Injury
  • Tissue injury from exposure to white
    phosphorous appears to be caused primarily by
    heat production, The ultimate result of this
    thermal injury is often a painful partial or
    full-thickness burn

63
Prehospital Care
  • Immediate removal of contaminated clothing
  • Submersion of phosphorus-contacted skin in cool
    water (Avoid warm water because white phosphorous
    becomes liquid at 44C
  • Remove phosphorus particles from victims skin and
    submerge in water.
  • Cover burned skin with towels soaked in cool
    water during transport to the ED.

64
Treatment Of White Phosphorus Burns
  • Wash burned skin with a suspension of 5 Sodium
    bicarbonate and 3 copper sulfate in 1
    hydroxyethyl cellulose (This mixture must be made
    by hospital pharmacies )
  • For easy identification
  • Decreases the rate of oxidation of phosphorus
    particles to limit their damage to underlying
    tissue
  • Remove blackened particles

65
Systemic Complications
  • Metabolic derangements have been identified in
    white phosphorous burns.
  • Postburn serum electrolyte changes consist of
    depression of serum calcium and elevation of
    serum phosphorus. Also identified are postburn
    ECG abnormalities, including prolongation of QT
    interval, bradycardia, and ST-T wave changes.
    These ECG changes may explain early sudden death
    occasionally seen in patients with apparently
    inconsequential white phosphorous burns.
  • After hydrotherapy and treatment with appropriate
    antidote, definitively manage skin burns in the
    hospital intensive care unit setting as with any
    other burn wound.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com