Burns are the 2nd leading COD for which age group.
Kids (18 and under)
3 concepts r/t tissue integrity
Injury caused by exposure to heat, chemical, radiation, electricity or extreme cold.
-Effect can last 2-3 days.
Burns
Exposure to this causes microvascular & inflammatory responses w/in minutes of injury. Causes fluid, electrolytes & proteins to leak into interstitial space
Thermal Burns
This is usually limited to injured tissue with smaller burns and noninjured tissue in larger burns.
Burn edema
Fluid shift from intravascular to interstitial spaces in thermal burns may cause what?
-Also, fluid loss from wound
hypovolemic shock
AKA: BURN shock
Types of chemical burns.
Acid burns cause what type of substance to form
Eschar - results from coagulation necrosis.
What is the purpose of eschar
prevent continued tissue damage beneath layer of eschar.
This type of burn causes protein liquifaction and produces a soupy wound.
Alkali chemical burn
-ammonia, lime
Protein liquifaction produces what kind of damage.
Continuing tissue damage to deeper structures.
-Occurs rapidly & continues until pH is corrected.
This chemical burn produces a thermal component & may be absorbed systemically producing renal & hepatic toxicity.
Organic chemical burns
-Phenols
This type of chemical burn can cause direct lung injury
Inhalation
Burns caused by electrical currents
Electrical burns
Type of electricity that is high voltage for an instant.
Direct Current (DC)
Type of electricity that causes tetanic muscle contractions.
Alternating current (AC)
Involves epidermis only.
Example is a sunburn.
-Erythema, minimal edema, pain
-Heals in 3-5 days
Superficial burn
Involves epidermis and superficial layer of the dermis.
Superficial partial-thickness burn
Involves epidermis, dermis & subcutaneous layer.
Full-thickness burn
Involves epidermis & deep layer of dermis.
Deep partial-thickness burn
Involve all layers of skin & may include injury to muscle, tendons or bone.
Subdermal burns
Area of wound that blanches with pressure & will heal in 7-10 days.
Zone of hyperemia
Innermost area of wound that is nonviable tissue
Zone of coagulation
Area of wound that can easily convert to either nonviable tissue if blood flow is not adequately returned.
-Area that is on the fence of good and bad.
Zone of stasis.