CH 26
CH 26
CH 26
Chapter 26
Burns
Introduction
Burns sustained during conventional military operations
constitute 5%-10% of injuries. Even burns to a small surface area
can be incapacitating for the casualty and strain the resources
of deployed military medical units. It is crucial to remember
that burns may represent only one of the casualty’s traumatic
injuries, particularly when an explosion is the mechanism of
injury. Resuscitation of the burn casualty is generally the most
challenging aspect of care during the first 48 hours following
injury, and optimal care requires a concerted effort on the part
of all providers involved during the evacuation and treatment
process.
Point-of-Injury Care
Key steps in the initial treatment of burn casualties include:
Stop the burning process. Extinguish flames. Move the patient
to a safe location. Remove all burned clothing. Safely separate
the patient from the power source related to electrical injury.
Remove chemical agents using copious amounts of clean
water.
Provide emergency resuscitative care. Control hemorrhage
and protect airway.
Remove all constricting articles. Remove items such as
wristwatches, rings, belts, and boots. Remove all contaminated
clothing and equipment.
Cover the patient. Do cover the patient with a clean, dry sheet
to minimize further contamination during transit. Place saline-
soaked dressings over wounds involving white phosphorus to
prevent ignition of the phosphorus on contact with air.
Protect against hypothermia. Utilize blanket(s) or other
warming devices to mitigate hypothermia. Patients with large
surface area burns are at increased risk of hypothermia.
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Primary Survey
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Burns
Airway.
o Consider cervical spine injury in patients injured in
explosions, falls, or by contact with high-voltage electricity.
o Burns are a “distracting injury”; pain secondary to burns,
and the treatment of pain with narcotics, may make the
clinical diagnosis of spinal injury difficult.
Breathing.
o Inhalation injury occurs
in 15% of burned com-
bat casualties. It is more
common in patients
with extensive cutane-
ous burns, a history of
injury in a closed space
(eg, building or vehi-
cle), and facial burns.
o Patients with major
burns and/or inhalation
injury require supple-
mental oxygen, pulse
oximetry, chest radiog-
raphy, and arterial blood
gas measurement.
o Circumferential full-
thickness burns of the Fig. 26-1. Dashed lines indicate the pre-
chest may prevent ef- ferred sites for escharotomy incisions.
fective chest motion. In Bold lines indicate the importance of
such patients, perform extending the incision over involved
immediate thoracic major joints. Incisions are made through
escharotomy as a life- the burned skin into the underlying
saving procedure to subcutaneous fat using a scalpel or elec-
permit adequate chest trocautery. For a thoracic escharotomy,
begin incision in the midclavicular lines.
excursion (Fig. 26-1). Continue the incision along the anterior
o Definitive diagnosis axillary lines down to the level of the cos-
of lower airway injury tal margin. Extend the incision across the
requires fiberoptic epigastrium as needed. For an extremity es-
bronchoscopy. charotomy, make the incision through the
eschar along the midmedial or midlateral
joint line.
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Emergency War Surgery
Determine the burn size based on the Rule of Nines (Fig. 26-
2). A patient’s hand (palm and fingers) is approximately 1%
of the total body surface area (TBSA). Only second and third
degree burns are included in burn size calculations.
o Overestimation is common and may lead to overresuscitation.
Estimate initial hourly rate for crystalloid resuscitation
utilizing the Rule of Tens and adjust hourly based on
response.
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Burns
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Emergency War Surgery
Secondary Survey
Perform a thorough head-to-toe secondary survey, looking for
non-thermal injuries, including fractures, dislocations, corneal
abrasions, and/or tympanic membrane rupture.
Ocular examination for corneal laceration and/or globe trauma
should be performed early before resuscitation-related edema
makes examination more difficult.
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Burns
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Burns
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Extremity Care
Carefully monitor the extremities throughout the resuscitation
period. Management of the burned extremity can be
summarized as follows:
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Burns
o Elevate.
o Exercise burned extremities hourly.
o Evaluate pulses and neurological status hourly.
o Perform escharotomy as indicated.
In extremities with full-thickness, circumferential burns,
edema formation beneath the inelastic eschar may gradually
constrict the venous outflow and, ultimately, arterial
inflow. Adequate perfusion must be assessed hourly during
resuscitation.
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Emergency War Surgery
Other Considerations
After 24-48 hours postburn, patients will develop a
hypermetabolic state, with hyperthermia, tachycardia, and
hypercatabolism. These changes are proportional to burn
size, and may be difficult to distinguish from early sepsis.
Stress ulcer prophylaxis with IV medication is crucial during
the early phases of treatment following severe burns.
Implement early enteral nutrition once the patient is
hemodynamically stable, generally by 24 hours postburn.
Respiratory care.
o Soon after injury, patients with subglottic inhalation injury
may develop casts composed of fibrinous exudate, blood,
mucus, and debris. Inhaled heparin sodium, at a dose
of 10,000 units, should be given by nebulization every 6
hours to prevent the formation of casts and help prevent
potentially life-threatening obstruction of endotracheal
tubes.
o Subglottic inhalation injury may persist longer than
clinically evident. Extubation must be performed with
caution after adequate airway assessment.
Patients with large burns are at risk of abdominal compartment
syndrome, which is best avoided by keeping the infused
volume < 250 mL/kg during the first 24 hours postburn.
Electrical Injury
High-voltage electrical injury (>1,000 volts) causes muscular
damage that often is much greater in extent than the overlying
cutaneous injury.
Examine the extremities for compartment syndrome and
perform urgent fasciotomy as needed.
Gross pigmenturia (myoglobinuria) may result, and fluid
resuscitation must be modified to protect against renal injury.
o Pigmenturia is diagnosed by reddish-brownish urine,
with a dipstick test that is positive for blood, but with
insignificant numbers of red blood cells on microscopy.
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Burns
Chemical Burns
Initial treatment requires immediate removal of the offending
agent.
o Brush any dry materials off the skin surface before
implementing lavage with copious amounts of water.
o In the case of alkali burns, lavage may need to be continued
for several hours.
o Resuscitate and manage chemical burns just as you would
a thermal burn.
Triage Considerations
Application of optimal care currently results in survival of
approximately 50% of young adults whose burns involve 80%
or more of the TBSA. However, treatment options in a battlefield
triage situation may be less than optimal, and expectant care
may be considered for patients with burns that exceed 80%
TBSA when resources are limited. Expectant status (comfort
care) should not be implemented based solely on the severity
of injury alone, and resuscitation should be implemented for all
burn patients, provided resources are available for progressive
care, including evacuation to definitive care. Care can be delayed
for those patients with burns of 20% or less who are otherwise
hemodynamically stable.
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Burns
Summary
Burn patients must be evaluated as trauma patients,
searching for other injuries that may be more immediately
life-threatening than the burn itself.
Patients with burns involving 20% or more of the TBSA gener-
ally require formal fluid resuscitation and close monitoring.
The Rule of Tens provides a simplified means of estimating
the initial hourly fluid resuscitation rate in adults.
Placement of a Foley catheter and close monitoring of urine
output are essential parts of the resuscitation process.
Both under- and overresuscitation are associated with
undesired effects that must be avoided.
In most situations, the key factor affecting whether or
not a patient’s burns are deemed so severe as to warrant
implementing comfort care measures is not the extent of burn
alone, but rather the availability and access to definitive care,
including long-range evacuation if necessary.
Early communication and consultation with staff at the burn
center are encouraged; early discussion of management and
transport options ensures optimal coordination along the
continuum of care.
Consultation may be obtained 24/7/365 by contacting the US
Army Institute of Surgical Research (USAISR) Burn Center
at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, at (210) 222-BURN (2876) or via
email at: burntrauma.consult@us.army.mil.
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