Burn Classification & Extent - Sizzling Start
- Depth:
- 1st: Epidermis; red, pain.
- 2nd (Partial): Dermis; blisters (superficial), mottled/less pain (deep).
- 3rd (Full): All layers; leathery, insensate.
- 4th: Muscle/bone.
- Extent (TBSA):
- Rule of Nines (Adults): 📌 Multiples of 9! Head 9%, Arm 9%, Leg 18%, Trunk (Ant/Post) 18% each, Perineum 1%.
- Lund-Browder: Accurate for children.
- Palm Method: Palm ≈ 1% TBSA.
⭐ In children, head TBSA is larger (e.g., infant 18% vs adult 9%); Lund-Browder is key.
Burn Etiology & Patterns - Fiery Foes
- Thermal Burns:
- Dry Heat (Flame): Deep, charring, soot, singed hairs.
- Moist Heat (Scalds): Sharply demarcated, "tide mark", "zebra stripes"; often superficial.
- Contact: Mirror image of hot object.
- Chemical Burns:
- Acids: Coagulative necrosis (e.g., $H_2SO_4$ - black, $HNO_3$ - yellow).
- Alkalis: Liquefactive necrosis, deeper penetration, soapy feel.
- Electrical Burns:
- Entry (dry, grey-white, depressed) & Exit (everted, may be larger).
- "Joule burn" (internal heating).
- Radiation Burns: UV, X-rays, nuclear. Delayed onset.
- Lightning: Characteristic "Arborescent" or "Filigree" (Lichtenberg) figures.
⭐ Alkali burns are generally more severe than acid burns due to deeper tissue penetration via liquefactive necrosis.
Pathophysiology & Complications - Systemic Storm

- Initial Cascade: Burn → massive release of inflammatory mediators (cytokines, histamine).
- Causes ↑ capillary permeability → significant plasma loss, third spacing, and edema.
- Burn Shock: Primarily hypovolemic; develops rapidly.
- Leads to ↓ cardiac output, ↓ organ perfusion. Max edema by 24-48 hrs.
- Systemic Effects:
- SIRS (Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome) is common.
- Intense hypermetabolic state: ↑BMR, catabolism, high O₂ demand.
- Profound immunosuppression: ↑ susceptibility to infections.
⭐ Sepsis is the leading cause of death in burn patients after the initial 24-48 hours resuscitation period.
Forensic Autopsy in Burns - Charred Clues
- Key Objectives: Determine if burns antemortem/postmortem, cause of death, identity.
- Antemortem Burn Indicators (Vital Signs):
- Soot in Airways: Trachea, bronchi; indicates breathing during fire.
- Carboxyhemoglobin (COHb): Levels > 20-50% for significant exposure; cherry-red discoloration of tissues/blood.
- Vital Reaction: Blisters with albuminous fluid, red line of demarcation.
- Postmortem Burn Features:
- Absence of soot in deep airways.
- No significant COHb elevation.
- Blisters without inflammation, easily rubbed off.
- Other Significant Findings:
- Pugilistic Attitude: Flexion of limbs due to heat-induced muscle coagulation (not a sign of struggle).
- Heat Hematoma: Epidural, brick-red/chocolate-colored, honeycomb appearance (vs. traumatic hematoma).
- Heat ruptures/splits in skin.
⭐ Modern forensic practice emphasizes multidisciplinary approach including advanced imaging (PMCT), toxicological analysis, and genetic analysis alongside soot deposition in deep airways to differentiate antemortem from postmortem burns.
- Internal Examination: Assess for visceral injuries, pre-existing diseases, toxic substances (e.g., cyanide).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Rule of Nines (adults) & Lund-Browder chart (children) for TBSA estimation.
- Pugilistic attitude: Post-mortem heat artifact, not a sign of struggle.
- Cherry-red tissues: Indicate CO poisoning in fire victims.
- Soot in airways: Vital sign, proves victim was alive during fire.
- Heat hematoma: Post-mortem epidural artifact, not true antemortem hemorrhage.
- Scalds show clear margins, trickling; flame burns have singed hair, soot.
- Burn degrees impact prognosis; shock & sepsis are key complications.
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