Burns Flashcards
0
Q
Rule of 9’s - Body surface affected
A
Head and each arm = 9%
Back and chest each = 18%
Each leg = 18%
Perineum = 1%
Surface area of hand = 1% body surface
1
Q
Classification
A
“Flames Can Cause Excessive Scars”
- Flame burns
- Chemical burns
- Contact burns
- Electric injury
- Scald burns
2
Q
Parkland’s Formula
A
4ml/kg x % body surface affected = fluid resuscitation
First half in 8hrs, second half in next 16hrs
eg. 100kg pt with 40% burns
4ml x 100kg x 40% = 16 000ml in 24hrs
3
Q
Management
A
- Weigh pt
- Determine body surface area affected
- Calculate fluid resuscitation
- First 24hrs = crystalloid (ringers lactate)
- Next 24hrs = maintenance fluid + colloid (0.3-0.5ml/kg/%BSA)
4
Q
Signs of inhalation injury
A
- High index of suspicion
- Hx of flame burns or burns in enclosed spaced
- Deep dermal or full thickness burns to face, neck or upper torso
- Singed nasal hairs
- Carbonaceous sputum or carbon particles in oropharynx
5
Q
Classification of Burn Depth
A
- Full thickness: extend through all layers into subcutaneous tissue
- Partial thickness: do not extend through all skin layers
- Superficial
- Superficial dermal
- Deep dermal
6
Q
Acute management of burn in child under 5
A
- Secure airway if suspected inhalation burns
- Replace fluid losses –> IV Ringer’s lactate and dextrose infusions
- Irrigate burn with water at 17*C for 20 mins
- Monitor fluid input and output
- Cover with burnshield or Gelonet dressing for first 24hrs
- Analgesia
7
Q
Types of burns and how to differentiate between them
A
- Superficial: red, no blistering
- Partial thickness: red, hypo-pigmented, blistering
- Full thinkness: thick and leathery
- Complete: burn through to muscle or bone
8
Q
How to assess the size of a burn
A
- Depth
- Surface area