High-Pressure Injection Injuries
■ Tend to have a benign appearance but high morbidity.
■ Must be referred to hand specialist or plastic surgeon immediately for
debridement.
■ Give prophylactic Abx, update Td, and elevate and splint extremity.
■ Plain film X-ray may show widespread radiopaque material and air.
■ Do not perform a digital block as this may increase compartment pressure.
BURNS
Thermal Burns
Burns are described according to depth, with superficial burns involving only
the epidermis, partial-thickness burns involving both the epidermis and part
of the dermis, full-thickness burns destroying the entire epidermis and dermis,
and subdermal burns involving the subdermal tissues (see Table 3.11).
SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Evaluation of burns involves five main components:
■ Evaluation of airway and breathing
■ Consideration of possible carbon monoxide and cyanide exposure
■ Estimation of involved TBSA
■ Determination of depth of burned skin (see Table 3.12)
■ Evaluate for involvement of critical parts and for circumferential burns.
■ Signs of inhalational injury:
■ Fire in enclosed space
■ Facial burns or singed nasal hair
■ Carbonaceous sputum, soot in mouth or nose
■ Hoarseness, stridor, expiratory wheezing
■ To estimate involved TBSA in adults, the Rule of Nines is commonly used
(see Figure 3.19):
■ 9 for each upper extremity
■ 18 for each lower extremity
■ 18 each for front and back of torso
■ 9 for the head
TRAUMA ■ 1 for perineum
TABLE 3.11. Burn Classifications
NEWTERMINOLOGY OLDTERMINOLOGY DEPTH
Superficial First-degree Epidermal layer only
Partial-thickness Second-degree Epidermis and superficial dermis
Superficial
Deep Epidermis to deep dermis, including
hair follicles and sweat/sebaceous glands
Full-thickness Third-degree Epidermis and dermis (all structures)
Subdermal Fourth-degree Subdermal structures (muscles, nerves, bone)
High-pressure injection
injuries require immediate
surgical consultation.
5 mm of healthy nail bed is
required for nail adherence.
The more proximal the
amputation, the less ischemia
time it can tolerate.
Thermal injury below vocal
cords only occurs with steam
inhalation.