BURNS IN CHILDREN A Lecture by Dr. B. O. Edelu Department of Paediatrics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Burn Management Kenneth DeSart.
Advertisements

JAHD – 1/5/2012 PETER COTTRELL Estimation of ‘Burn % Total Body Surface Area (TBSA)’ and fluid resuscitation.
Chapter 10 Soft Tissue Injures
Burn 2 DR. AXIEL YC SIU REVISED BY DR. CHAN MING YIN JULY, 2013 HKCEM College Tutorial.
Chapter 9 Common surgical problems Burns. Case study: Alisher Alisher, a 10 months old girl was brought to the district hospital by her mother. At presentation.
Activity Burn Unit Treatment Options
Elsevier items and derived items © 2010, 2006, 2002 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 28 Care of Patients with Burns.
Emergency Department Warwick Hospital
BURNS BLS, ILS, ALS OTEP Russ Armstrong, EMT-I, Fire Prevention Officer, Stevens County Fire Protection District #1.
Outpatient Burns: Prevention and Care Jade Hennings R1 American Family Physician
Definition: Burn is the loss of epithelium and a varying degree of dermis due to exposure to physical form of energy, certain chemicals or radiation.
Burns in kids -MaryAnn Dakkak, MD. (Almost) 3 yo girl Healthy No significant PMH Making pancakes with father, puts her hand on the skillet Immediately.
Burns PAGES LEQ: HOW DOES THE TYPE OF BURN DETERMINE THE TYPE OF TREATMENT PROVIDED?
Mosby items and derived items © 2005, 2001 by Mosby, Inc.
Care of the Burn Patient Presented by Annmarie Keck RN, CEN, EMT-B Northwest MedStar Clinical Outreach Educator.
Burn Injuries Adaobi Okobi, M.D.. Learning Objectives Epidemiology Pathophysiology Classification of burns Red flags Treatment.
Burns Dr. Stella Yiu Emergency Physician, TOH. LMCC objectives Diagnose severity and extent Manage complications Institute initial management of burn.
Burns By Matthew & Ivan. Anatomy of the Skin The anatomy of the skin is complex, and there are many structures within the layers of the skin. There are.
Dr.Adnan Gelidan FRCS( C ), FACS Assistant Professor Of Surgery Plastic Surgery KSU.
EMS Assessment and Initial Care of Burn Patients Guidelines from the American College of Surgeons and American Burn Association By Joe Lewis, M.D.
Injuries Injuries are one of our nation’s most important health problems 5 leading causes of injury-related death are – – Motor Vehicle crashes – Falls.
1 u Burn.Emergencies OBJECTIVE 2 OBJECTIVE 2 u RELIEVE PAIN AND PREVENT ADDITIONAL CONTAMINATION TREAT FOR SHOCK.
 ACS Committee on Trauma Presents Injuries Due to Burns and Cold Injuries Due to Burns and Cold.
BURNS. Types of burns Depths of burns Extent of burns General Treatment Others Airway burns Electrical burns Chemical splashes to eyes.
Burns By: Vera Ware.
BURNS Incidence and Causes 8,000-10,00 burns per year in the U.S.A.
Chapter 9.  Estimate size of injury and determine associated injuries  Discuss the principles of initial assessment and treatment  Identify special.
GSACEP core man LECTURE series:
Lesson 10: Burns Emergency Reference Guide p
Pediatric Burns.
Burns Degree of Burns 1 st superficial partial-thickness burn 2 nd deep partial- thickness burn 3 rd full-thickness burn.
Types of Burns Thermal Chemical Electrical Energy (laser, welding, etc.
Soft Tissue Injuries Burns
Physical Injuries PresentedBy Said Said Elshama Learning Objectives 1- Types of physical injuries 2- Dry burn 3- Moist burn 4- Electrocution 5- Corrosive.
BURNS. Burns are a special type of soft tissue injury Burns can damage one or more layers of skin and the layers of fat, muscle and bone beneath.
Burns Aaron J. Katz, AEMT-P, CIC
Dr. Maria Auron, Ilembula 2014
Soft Tissue Injuries Chapter 10. Soft Tissue The skin is composed of two primary layers:  Outer (epidermis)  Deep (dermis) The dermis layer contains.
Copyright © 2010 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Timby/Smith: Introductory Medical- Surgical Nursing, 10/e 01/25 PG 1054 Chapter.
First Aid Burns. Burns Classified as either Thermal (Heat) Chemical Electrical.
Burns Basic Trauma Course.
بنام خداوند جان آفرین. دکتر بهشتی متخصص بیماریهای پوست و مو عضو هیئت علمی دانشگاه.
Burns -are injuries to the skin, soft tissue, and bone - destroys top, middle, and bottom layers of skin.
FIRST AID AND EMERGENCY CARE LECTURE 8
BURN & SCALD. BURN –Dry burn is the tissue damage by dry heat of –Open flame, –Hot object, –Molten metal –Electricity –Friction with rapid moving Machine,
First Aid for Divers Burns 1 FAD 09 v1.3 Copyright © BSAC 2009 Burns.
Burn Injuries Rule of Nines
 An injury caused by heat, cold, electricity, chemicals, light, radiation, friction.  Highly variable in terms of the tissue affected, the severity,
Burns management Ruqayah A Al Hajji.
The Initial Assessment and Management of Burns
Chapter 7.
Evaluation and Management of Burns
Burn Injuries & Its Management
BURNS Dr.Ishara Maduka M.B.B.S. (Colombo)
18 Caring for Soft-Tissue Injuries and Bleeding.
NURSING CARE MANAGEMENT OF BURNS IN ER
First Aid.
Burn Patient Rehabilitation Prof.Dr: Ehab Kamal Zayed.
Activity Burn Unit Treatment Options
Presentation transcript:

BURNS IN CHILDREN A Lecture by Dr. B. O. Edelu Department of Paediatrics

Introduction  Burn is a type of injury to the flesh caused by heat, electricity, chemicals, fire, radiation or friction.  A common cause of preventable injury, especially in children  Most affect only the skin, but sometimes deeper structures are affected.  Children ≤ 2yrs more affected  Boys more affected than girls  Highly under reported because most minor burns will not present to the health facility  Scalds are burns caused hot liquids.

Classification of Burns  Can be classified in various ways:  Cause of burn  Depth of burn  Surface area  Severity* (Combination of factors)

Cause of injury  Heat  Electrical  Chemical  Fire  Radiation  Friction  Lightning

Class Layer involved AppearanceTextureSensation Healing time First degree Epidermis Redness (erythema) DryPainful1wk or less Second degree (Partial thickness) Extends into the dermis, but spares appendages Superficial - Clear blisters, Deep - Red or white with bloody blisters. MoistPainful Weeks - may progress to third degree Third degree (Full thickness) Involves all layers, including appendages Leathery and white/brown Dry, leathery Painless Requires excision and grafting Classification by Depth  Some include a fourth degree - Extends beyond the skin to the muscles and bone. Appears black and charred.

Based on surface area

Surface area cont’d

Based on Severity  Based on a number of factors, including total body surface area burnt, the involvement of specific anatomical zones, age of the person and associated injuries.  Minor burn (Can be managed as out patient)  First degree burn  Partial thickness burn involving <10% of total body surface area

Severity Cont’d  Major Burn (Requires hospital admission)  Partial thickness burn involving >10% of total body surface area  Any full thickness burn  Burns involving the hands, face, feet, or perineum  Burns that cross joints  Circumferential burns  Electrical burns  Burns associated with inhalational injury, fractures or other trauma  Burns in infants  Burns in persons at high-risk of developing complications

Pathophysiology of burns  Extent of damage depends on surface temperature and contact duration  Thermal burns cause coagulation of tissues by denaturing their proteins  As areas become reperfused, there is release of vasoactive substances,causing formation of reactive oxygen species which leads to ↑ sed capillary permeability.  Result is Pathophysiology fluid loss leading to ↑ sed plasma viscosity which can cause microthrombi formation.

Pathophysiology Cont’d  This excessive fluid loss usually occur in the 1 st 24 hrs before normalizing.  Therefore, under-resuscitation in the 1 st 24 hrs will lead to hypovolaemia and shock.  Burns also result in hypermetabolic state leading to fever, ↑ sed metabolic rate, ↑ sed ventilation, ↑ sed gluconeogenesis resistant to glucose infusion.

Chemical Burn  Severity of injury depends on PH of chemical, conc. of reagent, volume and contact time.  Acids mainly cause coagulation necrosis, forming a coagulum that limits further tissue penetration of the acid.  Bases on the other hand cause liquefaction necrosis which does not limit penetration, thus result in more severe injury.  Neutralization will cause release of heat and thus more burn injury.

Electrical Burn  Usually from contact with low voltage alternating current  High voltage burns more in adolescent males  Thermal energy is released in proportion to the amount of electrical current passing through the tissue  Low electrical resistance tissues like blood vessels, nerves and muscles are more affected.  Internal injury may be more significant than external injury.  This includes: ventricular fibrillation, cardiac arrest, muscle tetany, asphyxia from resp muscle involvement, myoglobinuria with resultant renal failure  Other assoc. injurie include fracture, dislocation from assoc. fall and visceral injury.

Management of Burns Emergency management  Follows standard protocol: ABC of life  First, remove cause of burn if still present  Airway  Facial burns with upper airway involvement require early intubation b/c it usually worsens over time  Breathing  Rapid assessment of respiratory effort, chest expansion, breath sound  Pulse oximetry, Arterial blood gases  100% O 2 mandatory for severe burns

Emergency management Cont’d  Circulation  Quick assessment of circulation- pulses, extremities, CRT, heart rate, mental status,  Initial fluid resuscitation for all severe burns (see below)  Secondary survey  Look for associated injury  Investigation  FBC, Group and xmatch, coagulation profile, CXR (may be delayed), SEUCr, ECG etc.

Further Management Outpatient management  Minor burns can be managed as an outpatient  Clean with warm saline or soap water  Leave blisters intact  Apply topical antibacterial agent eg. Silver sulfadiazine, bacitracin, mafenide, aqueous silver nitrate  Light dressing  Twice daily dressing  Analgesic (NSAID)  Daily follow up

Further Management Inpatient management  All major burns must be managed in the hospital  Fluid Therapy Parkland’s formula  1 st 24hrs: crystalloids(Ringer’s lactate) at 4ml/kg /% burn surface area  ½ given over 8 hrs and ½ over remaining 16hrs  Calculation of time starts from time of burn  After 24hrs, fluid requirement drops to about ½ of day 1 because of reabsorption of oedema fluids.  Colloids(albumin, plasma) may be introduced at this point  Dextrose may be added in the 1 st 24hrs in younger children

 Fluid Therapy Cont’d  Monitor Urine output closely and adjust fluid as indicated.  1ml/kg body weight/hr is adequate urine output  Oral fluid supplementation may start as early as 48hrs after burn  Also, monitor electrolyte closely.  Sodium and potassium supplementation may be needed in children with burns >20% BSA if 0.5% silver nitrate is used for dressing.

 Antibiotic therapy  Sepsis is a major complication of burn and must be anticipated.  Meticulous asepsis in all procedures  Early debridement of dead tissues and escharotomy  Topical and systemic antibiotics  Frequent examination of injury for signs of infection  Regular culture of wound swabs

 Pain management  Reduction of pain is very important to make child calm  Cover with clean sheet as even cool air movement increases pain.  Adequate anlgesia  IV analgesic more effective than IM and oral  Anxiolytic may be added to the analgesic  Emotional therapy (TLC) is an important component that helps relieve pain

Other management considerations  Tetanus toxoid boster  ATS for the unimmunized  Temperature regulation  Blood glucose monitoring

Prevention of Burns See Lecture on accidents and poisoning