Burn Basics - Sparking Knowledge
- Definition: Tissue injury: thermal, chemical, electrical, radiation.
- Types:
- Thermal: Scalds, flame, contact.
- Chemical: Acids (coagulation necrosis); Alkalis (liquefaction necrosis - severe).
- Electrical: Entry/exit wounds; cardiac risk.
- Burn Depth (Degrees):
- 1st (Superficial): Epidermis. Red, painful.
- 2nd (Partial Thickness): Dermis.
- Superficial: Blisters, very painful.
- Deep: Mottled, ↓ pain, scars.
- 3rd (Full Thickness): All layers. Leathery, insensate. Grafting.
- 4th: To muscle/bone.
- Severity (TBSA %):
- Rule of Nines (Adults): Head/Neck 9%, Arm 9% (each), Leg 18% (each), Ant. Trunk 18%, Post. Trunk 18%, Perineum 1%.
- Lund-Browder Chart: For children.
- Palm Method: Patient's palm ≈ 1% TBSA.
⭐ Inhalation injury (facial burns, sooty sputum) ↑ mortality in burns.
Body's Inferno - Systemic Sizzle
- Burn Shock:
- Patho: ↑ Capillary permeability → hypovolemia (fluid loss).
- Maximal edema: 24-48 hrs.
- Phases: "Ebb" (↓metabolism, 0-48h), "Flow" (↑hypermetabolism).
- SIRS & MODS:
- Cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6) → systemic inflammation, MODS.
- Metabolic Derangements:
- Hypermetabolism: ↑ Catecholamines, cortisol. RME ↑ up to 100%.
- ↑ Protein catabolism, hyperglycemia, insulin resistance.
- Inhalation Injury: Major mortality cause.
- Upper airway: Thermal edema.
- Lower airway/Parenchymal: Chemical pneumonitis (smoke) → ARDS.
- Systemic: CO poisoning (carboxyhemoglobin >10-15% symptomatic, >20% toxic), Cyanide.
- Signs: Facial burns, singed nasal hairs, soot, hoarseness.
- Complications:
- Immunosuppression → Sepsis (Pseudomonas aeruginosa).
- Renal: ATN (hypoperfusion/myoglobinuria).
⭐ Curling's ulcer: Stress ulcer (stomach/duodenum) post-severe burns.
- Hematologic: Anemia, coagulopathy.

Postmortem Puzzles - After the Ashes
- Antemortem (AM) vs. Postmortem (PM) Burns:
- Vital Reactions: Redness, blisters (albumin-rich), pus, inflammatory line in AM. Absent in PM.
- Soot in Airway: In trachea/bronchi indicates AM burning.
- COHb Levels: ↑ (>10%) suggests AM smoke inhalation.
⭐ Cherry-red discoloration of tissues/blood indicates CO poisoning (COHb >20-30%), a vital sign in fire victims.
- Pugilistic Attitude:
- Boxer's stance from heat-induced muscle coagulation.
- Occurs in both AM & PM burns; not a sign of struggle.
- Heat Ruptures:
- Irregular skin splits, everted edges, no hemorrhage.
- Differentiate from AM wounds.
- Heat Hematoma: Epidural, brick-red, honeycomb appearance; heat-induced, not trauma.
- Crow's Feet Sign: Spared wrinkles at eye corners; eyes closed during AM burn.

Special Cases - Shocking & Scalding
- Scalds (Hot Liquids/Steam)
- Patterns: glove & stocking, tide marks, zebra stripes (clothing folds), splash/drip.
- Immersion: sharp demarcation.
- Electrical Injuries
- Joule burn: internal heating ($H = I^2Rt$).
- AC: more dangerous; tetany ("no-let-go"); Ventricular Fibrillation (VF) at ~25-100 mA.
- DC: single convulsion; asystole at >300 mA.
- Entry: small, pale, depressed, charred center.
- Exit: larger, everted, "exploded".

- Lightning Injuries
- Lichtenberg figures (ferning): pathognomonic, transient.
- TM rupture, cataracts, keraunoparalysis.
⭐ Lichtenberg figures are pathognomonic for lightning strikes, not true burns, and fade within 24 hours.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Rule of Nines estimates adult TBSA; Lund-Browder chart for children.
- Soot in airways and elevated carboxyhemoglobin (>10%) are vital signs of antemortem burns.
- Pugilistic attitude is a postmortem heat artifact, not a sign of struggle.
- Heat hematoma (epidural) is a postmortem artifact, distinct from traumatic hemorrhage.
- Cherry-red discoloration suggests CO poisoning; >50-60% COHb is often fatal.
- Scalds show clear demarcation and run-off patterns; flame burns cause singeing of hairs and skin.
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