Initial Care of Burns

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Initial Care of Burns Connie Handel RN University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics

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Initial Care of Burns. Connie Handel RN University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics. Objectives. Discover who’s getting burned? Discuss Burn pathophysiology. Understand why some treatments are better than others. Review treatment options. Skin Structures. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Initial Care of Burns

Page 1: Initial Care of Burns

Initial Care of Burns

Connie Handel RNUniversity of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics

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Objectives

Discover who’s getting burned? Discuss Burn pathophysiology. Understand why some treatments are better

than others. Review treatment options.

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Skin Structures

Epidermis – outermost layer of keratinized cells Dermis – contains skin appendages, vascular supply

and nerve endings Subcutaneous Tissue

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Functions of the Skin

Barrier to infection

Protection from external injury

Temperature control

Control of body fluids

Sensory organ

Determines identity

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What is a burn?

Cutaneous injury caused by heat, electricity, chemicals, friction, or radiation.

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Burn Depth

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First Degree Burns

Epidermis affected only Red or pink, dry, painful,

blanches to touch Epidermis is intact Spontaneous healing

within 7 days. Outer injured epithelial cells peel

Seldom clinically significant

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Superficial Partial Thickness

Entire epidermis & portion of dermis (Papillary dermis)

Homogenous pink Painful Blisters Blanches Hair usually intact Does not scar, may pigment

differently

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Sup 2nd degree

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Deep partial thickness

Reticular dermis Mottled red and white Not painful to pinprick or pressure Does not blanch Heals > 3 weeks Usually scars Need to excise and graft

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Deep Partial Thickness

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Deep dermal

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Full Thickness: 3rd degree

May go into fat or deeper

Red, white, brown, black

Inelastic and leathery painless or numb Heals only from the

periphery Always excise and graft

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Full-thickness

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Etiology

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Types of burns

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Circumstances of injury

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Where do burns occur

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Admissions by age

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% of admissions vs. burn size

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Inhalation Injury

Exposure to heat and toxic products of combustion

50% of fire deaths are related to inhalation injuries Asphyxia/Carbon Monoxide displacement of oxygen

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Inhalation injury diagnosis

Closed-space fire Face burns

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Terminology

Inhalation injury “nonspecific”– Thermal injury

Upper airway Heat and toxic fumes

– Local chemical irritation Throughout airway Primarily toxic fumes

– Systemic toxicity CO

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Signs and symptoms

Lacrimation Cough Hoarseness Dyspnea Disorientation Anxiety Wheezing

Conjunctivitis Carbonaceous

sputum Singed hairs Stridor Bronchorrhea

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Pathophysiology

The main factor responsible for mortality in thermally injured patients

Carbon monoxide the most common toxin– 200 times greater affinity– Competitive inhibition with cytochrome P-450

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Poison management = CO

500 unintentional deaths each year Persistent Neurologic Sequelae

– May improve over time

Delayed Neurologic Sequelae– Relapse later

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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

10% COHb – asymptomatic, seen most often in smokers, truck drivers, traffic police

20% COHb - headache, nausea, vomiting, loss of dexterity

30% COHb - confusion & lethargy, possible ECG changes

40-60% COHb - coma 60% + - usually fatal

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Poison management = CO

Treatment– CO level means nothing to predict outcome– Length of hypoxia is the determining factor– Oxygen– HBO

No studies show benefit in treatment

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Reduction of CO

0

20

40

60

80

0 20 40 60 80

Time in Minutes

% C

O

Room Air100% Oxygen3 ATM

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Determine Burn Severity

% BSA involved Depth of injury Age Associated/pre-existing

disease or illness Burns to face, hands,

genitalia

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Difficulties with accurate initial assessment of burn size & depth

Soot, blisters, adherent clothing or debris obscure wound

Burns are dynamic…Progression is always a risk

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Burn Extent

Total Body Surface Area (TBSA)?

Rule of nines Lund and Browder chart Patients palm = about 1% TBSA

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Extent of Burn :“Rule of Nines”

Adult anatomical areas = 9% BSA (or multiple)

Not accurate for infants or children due to larger BSA of head & smaller BSA legs.

Burn diagrams illustrate adult – child differences

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Lund & Browder Chart

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Extent of Burns

Patient’s palmar surface (hand + Patient’s palmar surface (hand + fingers) = 1% TBSAfingers) = 1% TBSA

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Burn Depth

Factors

Temperature Duration of contact Dermal thickness Blood supply Special Consideration: Very young and

very old have thinner skin

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Burns begin at 44 degrees C

6 hours for burns to occur at

111 degrees F (44 C)

1 second of burns to occur at

140 degrees F (60 C)

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Time For Full Thickness Burns To Occur In Scalds

5 seconds in water @ 140 F (60 C)

30 seconds in water @ 130 F (55 C)

5 minutes in water @ 120 F (49 C)

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Pain control

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Ice Pack-----DO NOT USE EVER

DOES NOT– Reverse temperature– Inhibit destruction– Prevent edema

DOES– Delay edema– Reduce pain

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Non-medication methods

Cover burns with plastic wrap– Wet dressings will stick and cause more pain– Other burn dressings are expensive and not

necessary– Quik Clot is expensive and will not provide any

patient benefit

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Medication

Medications– Opioids– Narcotics– Pain medications– IV Analgesia

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Resuscitation

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IV access

< 15% TBSA – oral resuscitation 15 – 40% TBSA – one large bore IV > 40% -- two large bore IV’s IV’s should be in the upper extremities Suture IV’s started through burns

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Field resuscitation

Start IV with LR, through burn OK

– < 6 years = 125mL/hr– 6-13 years = 250mL/hr– >13 years = 500mL/hr

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Contact

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Contact Burn

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Scald Burn

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Flame Burn

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Grease Burn

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ABA Burn Referral Criteria

The ABA identifies the following as injuries requiring a Burn Center referral:

2nd degree burns > 10% TBSA Burns to face, hands, feet, genitalia, perineum, major joints 3rd degree burns Electrical injury Chemical burns Inhalation injuries Burns accompanied by pre-existing medical conditions Burns accompanied by trauma, where burn injury poses greatest

risk of morbidity or mortality. Burns to children in hospitals without pediatric services. Patients with special social, emotional or rehabilitative needs.

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UWHC Burn CenterVerified by the American Burn Association

7 ICU beds General care bed

expansion available as needed

Open to all burns, all ages, all times

Capability of providing specialized care for all patients, from pediatrics to geriatrics

Full time Surgical

Staff, House Staff, Nursing, Respiratory, Occupational and Physical Therapists, Social Worker, Nutritionist, Health Psychologist, Child Life and Pharmacist

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UWHC Burn CenterVerified by the American Burn Association

Closely integrated inpatient, rehabilitation and outpatient services

Outreach programs– Burn Support Group– Burn Camp– Burn Buddies– Juvenile Fire Starters

Program– School Reintegration– Burn Education to School

and Community Groups