Burns
A thermal burn is a type of burn resulting from making contact with heated objects, such as boiling water, steam, hot cooking oil, fire, and hot objects. Scalds are the most common type of thermal burn suffered by children, but for adults thermal burns are most commonly caused by fire. Conditions of thermal burns are a reddened to leathered skin condition; burn site pain; swelling; blistering, sometimes glossy from leaking fluid; skin loss or charring with patches appearing white, brown, or black. Burns are generally classified from first degree to fourth degree. However, thermal burns are most commonly categorized as minor, moderate, and major, based almost solely on the depth and size of the burn. Statistics from the American Burn Association (2015) report 73% of burns occur in the home, with males twice as likely to experience burns than females.
Related Indications
Schedule a Consultation
Research
Suspected cyanide poisoning in smoke inhalation: complications of sodium nitrite therapy.
Abstract: A 78 year old man was found comatose, apneic, and asystolic after closed-space smoke inhalation. He was successfully resuscitated to pulse and blood pressure at the scene. A cyanide component to the poisoning was suspected and two 300 mg doses of sodium...
Lipid peroxidation products in postischemic skeletal muscle and after treatment with hyperbaric oxygen.
Abstract: Earlier studies from our laboratory have shown that hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) treatment reduces edema, enhances aerobic metabolism and improves the recovery of the phosphorylase activity in postischemic rat skeletal muscle. However, as it has become...
[Experimental animal studies of the healing of burn wounds with the use of local antimicrobials and hyperbaric O2 therapy].
Abstract: Standardized burns without experimental infection and such with infection by a constant number of bacteria of a fixed Pseudomonas-aeruginosa-strain were treated differently. Silver sulfadiazine- and Cefsulodin-cream, Polyvidon-iodine-ointment (PVP-Jod), and...