Burns Flashcards

1
Q

Only epidermis damaged
red, swollen, tender
heals in a few days
“1st Degree”

A

Superficial Burn

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2
Q

Epidermis and Upper Dermis are damaged.
Swelling, redness, blistering, pain. Heals in 10 days - epithelial cells still present, minimal scarring.
“2nd Degree”

A

Superficial Partial Thickness Burn

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3
Q

Damage to epidermis & dermis (reticular layer)
Blood vessels, hair follicles and sweat glands. Red SEVERE EDEMA, heals in 3-5 weeks.
*also previously “2nd Degree”

A

Deep Partial-Thickness Burn

also previously “2nd Degree”

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4
Q
  • Destroys all skin layers down to subcutaneous fat
  • Eschar, leathery
  • Nerve endings destroyed (no pain)
  • Damage to lymphatic (minor edema visible)
  • Regeneration not possible
  • REQUIRES skin-grafting
  • heals in several months
    “3rd Degree”
A

Full-Thickness Burn

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5
Q

Burns that destroy subcutaneous fat, muscle and/or bone, often due to flame/electric shock
Requires surgery, skin-grafting, possible amputation. Can be lethal.

A

Subdermal Burn

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6
Q

What difference is there in utilizing the Lund-Browder Classification vs the Rule of 9s with children burn patients?

A

A child under one year has 9 % taken from the
lower extremities and added to the head region.
Each year of life, 1 % is distributed back to the
lower extremities until age 9 when the head
region is considered to be the same as an adult.

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7
Q

What is the #1 leading cause of death in burn patients that is associated with organ failure?

A

Infection

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8
Q

Scars from burns have what primary effects on a patient?

A

Loss of joint and muscle mobility
Loss of function
Cosmetic

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9
Q

What are the Cardiovascular Complications of burns?

A
  • Dehydration
  • Electro imbalances
  • Circulatory shock
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10
Q

Metabolic Complications of Burns.

A

Hyperthermia

Atrophy: protein and muscle loss

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11
Q

Respiratory Complications of Burns

A
  • smoke (noxious chemical inhalation)
  • pneumonia: significant cause of death
  • pulmonary edema
  • Lung/trachea damage (O2 capacity decreases in RBC)
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12
Q

Metabolic Complications of Burns

A
  • decreased core temp by 1.8-2.6 degrees
  • decreased weight
  • atrophy / weakness
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13
Q

Initial Burn Treatment Goals

A
  • adequate nutrition and calories
  • prevent infection
  • warmth
  • debridement, topical medications
  • dressings
  • skin-grafts
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14
Q

What is the anti-contracture position for burns on the back of the hand?

A
  • wrist: 30-40 degrees in extension
  • MCPs: 60-70 degrees flexion
  • IP joints in extension
  • mid-palmer: radial abduction
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15
Q

Physical Therapy Goals for Burns

A
  • promote healing
  • prevent deformity
  • maintain function
  • maintain or improve cardiopulm status
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16
Q

Indications for Pressure Garments on a burn patient.

A
  • hypertrophic/keloid scars

- burns taking more than 14 days to heal

17
Q

What rationale is there behind applying Pressure Garments?

A
  • tissue remodeling
  • re-organization of collagen
  • minimize edema