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708.452.7300 |
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154.370 Mhz
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Classifying Burns | Methods
Degrees | Severity
| Treatment
One of the most painful injuries that one can ever experience is
a burn injury. When a burn occurs to the skin, nerve endings are
damaged causing intense feelings of pain. Every year, millions of
people in the United States are burned in one way or another. Of
those, thousands die as a result of their burns. Many require
long-term hospitalization. Burns are a leading cause of
unintentional death in the United States, exceeded in numbers only
by automobile crashes and falls.
Serious burns are complex injuries. In addition to the burn
injury itself, a number of other functions may be affected. Burn
injuries can affect muscles, bones, nerves, and blood vessels. The
respiratory system can be damaged, with possible airway obstruction,
respiratory failure and respiratory arrest. Since burns injure the
skin, they impair the body's normal fluid/electrolyte balance, body
temperature, body thermal regulation, joint function, manual
dexterity, and physical appearance. In addition to the physical
damage caused by burns, patients also may suffer emotional and
psychological problems that begin at the emergency scene and could
last a long time.
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Classifying Burns
Burns are classified in two ways: Method and Degree
of burn
Methods of Burns
 | Thermal - including flame, radiation, or excessive heat
from fire, steam, and hot liquids and hot objects. |
 | Chemical - including various acids, bases, and caustics. |
 | Electrical - including electrical current and lightning. |
 | Light - burns caused by intense light sources or
ultraviolet light, which includes sunlight. |
 | Radiation - such as from nuclear sources.
Ultraviolet light is also a source of radiation burns. |
Never assume the source of a burn. Gather information and be
sure.
Degrees of Burns
Determining the Severity of Burns
 | Source of the burn - a minor burn caused by
nuclear radiation is more severe than a burn caused by thermal
sources. Chemical burns are dangerous because the chemical may
still be on the skin. |
 | Body regions burned - burns to the face are
more severe because they could affect airway management or the
eyes. Burns to hands and feet are also of special concern
because they could impede movement of fingers and toes. |
 | Degree of the burn - the degree of the burn
is important because it could cause infection of exposed tissues
and permit invasion of the circulatory system. |
 | Extent of burned surface areas - It is
important to know the percentage of the amount of the skin
surface involved in the burn. The adult body is divided into
regions, each of which represents nine percent of the total body
surface. These regions are the head and neck, each upper limb,
the chest, the abdomen, the upper back, the lower back and
buttocks, the front of each lower limb, and the back of each
lower limb. This makes up 99 percent of the human body. The
remaining one percent is the genital area. With an infant or
small child, more emphasis is placed on the head and trunk. |
 | Age of the patient - This is important
because small children and senior citizens usually have more
severe reactions to burns and different healing processes. |
 | Pre-existing physical or mental conditions -
Patients with respiratory illnesses, heart disorders, diabetes
or kidney disease are in greater jeopardy than normally healthy
people.
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Treatment of Burns
 | Cool a burn with water. Do what you must to get cool water on the
burn as soon as you can. Go to the nearest water faucet and turn on
the cold spigot and get cool water on the burn. Put cool,
water-soaked cloths on the burn. If possible, avoid icy cold water
and ice cubes. Such measures could cause further damage to burned
skin. |
 | Never apply ointment, grease or butter to
the burned area. Applying such products, actually confine the heat
of the burn to the skin and do not allow the damaged area to cool.
In essence, the skin continues to "simmer." After the
initial trauma of the burn and after it has had sufficient time to
cool, it would then be appropriate to put an ointment on the burn.
Ointments help prevent infection. |
 | The one exception to the "Cool a Burn" method is when
the burn is caused by lime powder. In that case, carefully brush the
lime off the skin completely and then flush the area with water. In
the event of any serious burns, call 9-1-1. |
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11 Conti Parkway * Elmwood Park, Illinois 60707
Telephone 708.452.7300 * Fax 708.452.3957
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Copyright © 1998 - 2003 Village of Elmwood Park
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