Pathophysiology & Assessment - Flames & First Response
- Etiology: Flames, scalds, chemical, electrical.
- First Response (ABCDE):
- Stop burning; remove constrictions.
- Airway (check for inhalation injury: soot, facial burns).
- Breathing; Circulation (IV access).
- Assessment:
- Depth: Superficial, Partial, Full-thickness.
- TBSA: Rule of Nines (Adults), Lund-Browder (Peds).
- 📌 Rule of Nines: Head/Arm 9% each, Leg/Trunk (front/back) 18% each, Perineum 1%.
- Pathophysiology: Mediator release → ↑capillary permeability → edema, hypovolemia → shock.
- Fluids: Parkland: $4mL \times \text{wt (kg)} \times %TBSA$.

⭐ Administer half of total 24-hr resuscitation fluid in first 8 hrs post-burn.
Airway & Respiratory - Breathing Through Fire
- Inhalation Injury Assessment:
- Signs: Facial burns, singed nasal hairs, soot, hoarseness, stridor.
- History: Enclosed space fire.
- Early Intubation Criteria:
- Stridor, respiratory distress, hypoxia ($PaO_2$ <60 mmHg), hypercapnia ($PaCO_2$ >50 mmHg).
- GCS <8, extensive facial/neck burns, circumferential neck burns.
- Use larger ETT (edema).
- Management:
- 100% humidified O₂.
- Bronchodilators.
- Lung protective ventilation (ARDS).
- Monitor COHb (>10% = CO poisoning).
- Consider cyanide poisoning.
- Chest escharotomy for circumferential chest burns.

⭐ Early prophylactic intubation is critical in suspected airway burns as edema can rapidly progress, making later intubation difficult or impossible.
Fluid Resuscitation - Quenching the Inferno
- Goal: Combat shock, maintain perfusion.
- Fluid of Choice: Ringer's Lactate (RL).
- Parkland Formula: $4 \text{ mL} \times \text{Wt (kg)} \times % \text{TBSA (2nd/3rd°)}$.
- Administer:
- ½ in first 8 hrs (from burn).
- ½ in next 16 hrs.
- Administer:
- Monitoring & Endpoints:
- Urine Output (UOP):
- Adults: 0.5-1 mL/kg/hr.
- Children (<30kg): 1-2 mL/kg/hr.
- Electrical burns: Target 75-100 mL/hr (or 1-1.5 mL/kg/hr for myoglobinuria).
- Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) > 65 mmHg.
- Lactate < 2 mmol/L.
- Improved sensorium.
- Urine Output (UOP):
⭐ The "first 8 hours" for Parkland formula fluid administration starts from the time of burn injury, not from hospital arrival.
Intraoperative Anesthesia - Navigating Burn Surgery
- Agents: Ketamine (induction); Volatiles/TIVA (maintenance). Non-depolarizers: ↑ dose, monitor blockade.
- Monitoring: Standard + Arterial line, CVP. Core temp (esophageal/bladder). Urine output > 0.5-1 mL/kg/hr.
- Fluids & Blood: Aggressive resuscitation. Anticipate major blood loss; transfuse for Hb > 7-8 g/dL.
- Temperature: Maintain normothermia: Warm OR (>28°C), fluid warmers, forced air warmers.
- Analgesia: Multimodal approach (opioids, ketamine).
⭐ Succinylcholine is contraindicated 24 hours to 2 years post-burn due to severe hyperkalemia risk from extrajunctional receptor upregulation. )
Post‑Op & Complications - Aftermath & Alerts
- Pain Control: Multimodal analgesia (opioids, ketamine, regional).
- Infection: Major risk. Monitor for sepsis (fever, ↑HR, ↑RR, WBC changes). Wound care crucial.
- Antibiotic stewardship.
- Fluid Balance: Titrate to UO (>0.5-1 mL/kg/hr adults, >1 mL/kg/hr children).
- Nutrition: High protein, high calorie. Early enteral feeding.
- Key Complications:
- Hypothermia: Aggressive warming.
- ARDS, VAP.
- AKI (rhabdomyolysis).
- Curling's ulcer (PPI prophylaxis).
- Contractures: Early PT/OT.
⭐ > Sepsis is the leading cause of late mortality in burn patients.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Prioritize airway management, especially with inhalational injury; early intubation is key.
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation (Parkland: 4mL x %TBSA x kg) is crucial; target urine output 0.5-1 mL/kg/hr.
- Avoid succinylcholine >24 hrs post-burn due to severe hyperkalemia risk.
- Expect resistance to NDMRs; higher doses may be needed.
- Actively prevent hypothermia due to significant heat loss.
- Utilize multimodal analgesia for comprehensive pain relief.
- Consider CO poisoning in smoke inhalation; give 100% oxygen immediately_._
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