Category: Pediatrics
Posted: 6/29/2012 by Rose Chasm, MD
(Updated: 11/22/2024)
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Submitted by Dr. Lauren Rice
The summertime can be full of lots of fun activities (beach, fireworks, cookouts, and campfires) that can put children at risk of burns.
Burn depth classification:
1. Superficial (first-degree): red and blanching with minor pain, resolves in 5-7 days
2. Partial thickness (second-degree): red and wet with blisters, very painful, resolves in 2-5 weeks
Treatment: clean with soap and water twice daily, and apply silvadene wrap with gauze, kerlex
3. Full thickness (third-degree): dry and leathery without pain, no resolution after 5-6 weeks, may require graft
Treatment: wound debridement and dressings as above
Parkland formula: 4ml/kg/%TBSA in 1st 24 hours with 50% of total volume in 1st 8 hours
Calculate burn surface area:
-SAGE: free computerized burn diagram available at www.sagediagram.com
-Rule of Nines > 14 years old
-Rule of Palm <10 years old
Burn Center Referral
-Extent: partial thickness of >30% TBSA or full thickness of >10-20%
-Site: hands, feet, face, perineum, major joints
-Type: electrical, chemical, inhalation
1. Cross, J.T. and Hannaman, R.A. MedStudy Pediatrics Board Review Core Curriculum, 5th edition, p. 3-11, 3-12.
2. Children’s National Medical Center, Department of Trauma and Burn Surgery. Trauma Cheat Sheet.