Pomoc przedszpitalna u oparzonych

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 103-114
Author(s):  
Ryszard Mądry ◽  
Jerzy Strużyna ◽  
Tomasz Korzeniowski ◽  
Aleksandra Winiarska

Advancements in burn treatment, in the last decades, resulted in a reduction of mortality among burn victims. Increased funding and the creation of regional burn treatment facilities focused on comprehensive therapy of severe burns resulted in improvement of treatment outcomes. Effective functioning and usage of resources in burn centers depends on the organization of prehospital care, proper segregation of patients, triage and prompt transfer to a place where highly specialized care is available. Initial care of a burn injury patient includes actions taken by witnesses of the event and by the emergency medical team during transfer to the emergency department. After evaluating and stabilizing the patient, a decision is made whether or not he should be treated at a specialized burn treatment center to which he may be transferred by land or by air. This paper presents burn patient treatment protocols at each of the following stages: at the burn scene, during transportation, initial hospital treatment and criteria for referring the patient to a burn treatment center.

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S135-S135
Author(s):  
Eileen Uberti ◽  
Kathrina Prelack

Abstract Introduction Hair highlighting treatment has become popular at salons across the country. The ubiquity of this beauty treatment gives many people the impression that it is safe. The process of changing hair color differs between hair salons and hair stylists. We describe the cases of two teenage patients who received third degree burns from hair highlighting treatments. Differences in highlighting technique and treatment modality will be compared and contrasted. Methods As part of a quality assurance project looking at variation in scalp burn treatment and outcome, two patients were identified who experienced scalp burn injury due to hair highlighting. Patient 1 received a hot foil hair lighting application. After 5 minutes, the patient experienced tingling in the scalp and removed heat lamp and foils from hair. The first two weeks of treatment were administered by her primary care provider before the patient admitted to our burn facility, where topical collagenase was initiated. Forty two days after initial injury the patient underwent first surgery for debridement, followed by subsequent excision and grafting of scalp. Patient returned for tissue expansion nine months later. Patient 2 received a hair highlighting treatment of bleach and water. Patient 2 complained of burning and immediately her hair was washed out by the hairdresser. The patient was seen two weeks later in our clinic, and treated conservatively with mineral oil and antibacterial topical application. Patient was offered tissue expansion surgery but declined. Results Table 1. compares injury type, treatment and outcome in these two patients. Both injuries required significant time to heal, ranging between 56–70 days. Although similar injuries, mode of treatment differed at this same institution. Both patients made decisions based on school activities and fear or surgery, which prolonged time of conservative treatment. Patient 1 received psychological support and anti-anxiety medication prior to all treatments. After tissue expansion Patient 1 no longer required medication and had no sign of alopecia. Patient 2 has area of alopecia 2x2 cm. Neither patient requires further follow up, however Patient 2 could return for tissue expansion if desired. Conclusions Hair highlighting is a risk for serious scalp burn injury. Conservative treatment (often per patient preference) is associated with prolonged days to healing. Surgical intervention which includes subsequent tissue expansion, combined with psychological support and anxiety management results in good outcome. Applicability of Research to Practice Results from this analysis will be used to develop treatment protocols and staff education on scalp burn injury.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Ferrand ◽  
Mathieu Guingo ◽  
Christian Beauchêne ◽  
Maurice Mimoun ◽  
Jean-Pierre Minier

<p>Faced with the first Covid-19 epidemic wave in France, the hospital sector has been forced to considerably increase the number of intensive care beds. To meet this crucial need, some hospital structures have been adapted. This is the case with one of the intensive care sectors of the Burn Treatment Center (CTB) at Saint-Louis Hospital, which has intensive care rooms dedicated to treat burn patients. Beyond the provision and adaptation of these care structures to Covid patients, the hospital has currently an imperative need to progress on the understanding of the dispersion of buccopharyngeal droplets which constitute one of the risk vectors of airborne transmission and as a corollary of manual transmission.</p><p>As part of a partnership between CTB and the EDF Foundation, a CEREA research team provided the hospital with its aeraulics expertise which mainly relies on the digital modelling tool (CFD) code_saturne developed for more than 20 years by EDF-Research and Development. Numerical modelling in fluid mechanics makes it possible to accurately reproduce an architectural ensemble, to describe the air flows and what they carry, and thus to better understand where the risks of airborne contamination lie.</p><p>The objective of the study is to understand the dispersion of the buccopharyngeal droplets in the resuscitation room according to their sizes, identify the areas at risk of deposit, adapt the treatment protocols and optimise the level and the frequency of systematic bio-cleaning of surfaces exposed to deposit of oral-pharyngeal droplets. It should be noted that we are not directly dealing with the spread of the covid-19 virus but with one of the potential vehicles of oral-pharyngeal droplets.</p><p>The methodology consist of a parametric study of poly-dispersion of classes of particles. Each class correspond to a droplet diameter and contains one million of independent droplets for which a Generalized Langevin Model is solved to calculate the instantaneous fluid velocity seen from the particle, the particle velocity and its position. These particles are carried by a turbulent flow using the Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes approach, calculating only moments. The specific characteristics of this model allow dealing with poly-dispersed two-phase flow even for particles with very small diameters. The studied parameters are the angle of droplet ejection, the volume of humid air ejected and the time duration of this event and the air flowing activation of the room.</p><p>Expected conclusions are found: the largest particles sediment the fastest and close to the source, the finest droplets follow the streamlines to the air vents. In addition, non-intuitive areas of potential deposit are observed and a major impact of air conditioning on residence time is demonstrated.</p><p><img src="https://contentmanager.copernicus.org/fileStorageProxy.php?f=gnp.b43390093fff52971650161/sdaolpUECMynit/12UGE&app=m&a=0&c=4345eb35e27ea319150c5cf3afab9d44&ct=x&pn=gnp.elif&d=1" alt=""></p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Vasin ◽  
O Mironova ◽  
V Fomin

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: None. Background/Introduction: The optimal choice of the thrombolytic drug for emergency revascularization in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) still remains to be defined. Percutaneous coronary intervention is a more safe and effective method of reperfusion compared with thrombolytic therapy, that’s why the last is relatively not common nowadays. But in the COVID-19 era in a number of cases some patients with ACS can’t be quickly hospitalized due to different reasons like the absence of the nearest available cardiovascular center, or lack of an ambulance. A long period of chest pain forces the doctors to use systemic thrombolytic therapy. Purpose This study investigates the efficacy and safety of Alteplase, Prourokinase, Tenecteplase, and Streptokinase in patients with acute coronary syndrome. Methods A retrospective, open, non-randomized cohort study was conducted. We have analysed 600 patients with ACS, who underwent systemic thrombolytic therapy at the prehospital and in-hospital stages from 2009 to 2011. Patients were divided into several groups according to the thrombolytic agent administered: Alteplase (254 patients), Prourokinase (309 patients), Tenecteplase (6 patients), Streptokinase (31 patients). Treatments were to be given as soon as possible. The ECG reperfusion criterion was a decrease in the ST segment by 50% or more from the initial elevation. Results  Among 600 patients (mean age, 61 years (SD = 20); 119 women [19.7%]), 440 had successful reperfusion. The median time from chest pain onset to the start of treatment was 3 hours (P < 0.001). The percentages of successful thrombolysis for each agent were similar: Alteplase 74,4% Prourokinase 71,2%, Tenecteplase 83%, Streptokinase 74,2%. No statistical differences were observed in thrombolytic results among these groups (OR: 0.60, 95% CI: 0,2868 to 1,217; P = 0.17). At the same time, the hospital treatment with prourokinase was more effective than prehospital care with prourokinase: 110 successful reperfusions in 138 patients (79.7%) and 110 successful reperfusions in 171 patients (64.3%), respectively. Regardless of the onset of the attack (OR: 0.45, 95% CI: 0,2004 to 0,9913; P = 0.05). The effectiveness of the other thrombolytics cannot be compared between prehospital care and hospital treatment due to the rare use at the hospital stage in our cases. In the study, there was also no statistical difference in complication rates among the treatment groups. Among all patients, there were 9 fatal outcomes (1.5%): Alteplase 3,15% Prourokinase 1,9%, Streptokinase 3,22%. Conclusion(s): In patients with ACS, all thrombolytic drugs showed similar effectiveness. There is no difference in the safety and efficacy among the agents in our study, but there is a difference in cost and route of administration. However, upcoming prospective trials with long follow-up periods might be expected to determine the most appropriate systemic thrombolytic drug.


2013 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
James P Sheppard ◽  
Ruth M Mellor ◽  
Sheila Greenfield ◽  
Jonathan Mant ◽  
Tom Quinn ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 1-2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon L. Klein

Abstract Given that oxidative stress is an inherent response to burn injury, it is puzzling as to why investigation into anti-oxidant therapy as an adjunct to burn treatment has been limited. Both the inflammatory response and the stress response to burn injury involve oxidative stress, and there has been some limited success in studies using gamma tocopherol and selenium to improve certain consequences of burns. Much remains to be done to investigate the number, doses and combinations of anti-oxidants, their efficacy, and limitations in improving defined outcomes after burn injury.


BMJ Open ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. e023709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Esther MM Van Lieshout ◽  
Daan T Van Yperen ◽  
Margriet E Van Baar ◽  
Suzanne Polinder ◽  
Doeke Boersma ◽  
...  

IntroductionThe Emergency Management of Severe Burns (EMSB) referral criteria have been implemented for optimal triaging of burn patients. Admission to a burn centre is indicated for patients with severe burns or with specific characteristics like older age or comorbidities. Patients not meeting these criteria can also be treated in a hospital without burn centre. Limited information is available about the organisation of care and referral of these patients. The aims of this study are to determine the burn injury characteristics, treatment (costs), quality of life and scar quality of burn patients admitted to a hospital without dedicated burn centre. These data will subsequently be compared with data from patients with<10% total bodysurface area (TBSA) burned who are admitted (or secondarily referred) to a burn centre. If admissions were in agreement with the EMSB, referral criteria will also be determined.Methods and analysisIn this multicentre, prospective, observational study (cohort study), the following two groups of patients will be followed: 1) all patients (no age limit) admitted with burn-related injuries to a hospital without a dedicated burn centre in the Southwest Netherlands or Brabant Trauma Region and 2) all patients (no age limit) with<10% TBSA burned who are primarily admitted (or secondarily referred) to the burn centre of Maasstad Hospital. Data on the burn injury characteristics (primary outcome), EMSB compliance, treatment, treatment costs and outcome will be collected from the patients’ medical files. At 3 weeks and at 3, 6 and 12 months after trauma, patients will be asked to complete the quality of life questionnaire (EuroQoL-5D), and the patient-reported part of the Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale (POSAS). At those time visits, the coordinating investigator or research assistant will complete the observer-reported part of the POSAS.Ethics and disseminationThis study has been exempted by the medical research ethics committee Erasmus MC (Rotterdam, The Netherlands). Each participant will provide written consent to participate and remain encoded during the study. The results of the study are planned to be published in an international, peer-reviewed journal.Trial registration numberNTR6565.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  

Introduction: Scoring systems have been used successfully in burn centers to predict the prognosis and take measures for careful monitoring of the burned patient. Belgium Outcome Burn Injury score is one of them which takes into consideration age, burn surface area, and presence of inhalation burn. Objectives: This presentation aims to validate the use of the BOBI prognostic score in our patients. Patients and Methods: The study is a retrospective analytical study that utilized the investigation of the medical charts of 1515 patients hospitalized with severe burns within the ICU of the Service of Burns in Tirana, Albania during 2010-2019. Results: The overall mortality of our patients was 7.06% (107 deaths in 1515 patients). Up to BOBI score 6, we have noticed better mortality than prediction while there is a very good prediction up to score 10. Area Under the Curve was 0.978 (p<0.0001) which is an outstanding result in being a classifier between deaths and survivors. Conclusions: BOBI score is a very good prediction score for mortality in burn patients.


Author(s):  
H Denise Holley-Harrison ◽  
David Cunningham ◽  
Sai R Velamuri ◽  
William L Hickerson ◽  
David M Hill

Abstract Paraquat is used throughout the world as an herbicide due to efficacy and relative safety with proper handling. Accidents and misuse still occur, leading to countries banning its use or employing extra safeguards and special handling certifications. Severe toxicity is primarily associated with ingestion, but skin exposure leads to corrosive injury to the dermis, occurs rapidly, and progresses for up to 24 hours. Prolonged skin exposure or the presence of open wounds can lead to systemic absorption. This is the first known report of burn injury and treatment due to secondary exposure to the urine of a patient who had accidental ingestion of paraquat. A 50-year-old Caucasian male presented to the emergency room after accidental ingestion of eight ounces of Gramoxone extra (Paraquat 30% concentration). During initial care of the patient, the bedside registered nurse was placing an indwelling foley catheter when her forearms were contaminated with urine, while wearing basic personal protective equipment (gloves). The registered nurse noticed bullae to bilateral forearms a short time after exposure to the urine. She presented to the burn center for evaluation and treatment. Poison Control was contacted but was unable to offer advise due to lack of supportive literature. The risk and effects of primary exposure to Paraquat is described throughout the literature and documented in MSDS, but data regarding risk and treatment of secondary exposure is lacking. This case will aid outreach efforts for prevention and treatment of burn injuries from secondary exposure to paraquat.


2021 ◽  
pp. emermed-2021-211723
Author(s):  
Tan N Doan ◽  
Daniel Wilson ◽  
Stephen Rashford ◽  
Louise Sims ◽  
Emma Bosley

BackgroundSurvival from out-of-hospital traumatic cardiac arrest (TCA) is poor. Regional variation exists regarding epidemiology, management and outcomes. Data on prognostic factors are scant. A better understanding of injury patterns and outcome determinants is key to identifying opportunities for survival improvement.MethodsIncluded were adult (≥18 years) out-of-hospital TCA due to blunt, penetrating or burn injury, who were attended by Queensland Ambulance Service paramedics between 1 January 2007 and 31 December 2019. We compared the characteristics of patients who were pronounced dead on paramedic arrival and those receiving resuscitation from paramedics. Intra-arrest procedures were described for attempted-resuscitation patients. Survival up to 6 months postarrest was reported, and factors associated with survival were investigated.Results3891 patients were included; 2394 (61.5%) were pronounced dead on paramedic arrival and 1497 (38.5%) received resuscitation from paramedics. Most arrests (79.8%) resulted from blunt trauma. Motor vehicle collision (42.4%) and gunshot wound (17.7%) were the most common injury mechanisms in patients pronounced dead on paramedic arrival, whereas the most prevalent mechanisms in attempted-resuscitation patients were motor vehicle (31.3%) and motorcycle (20.6%) collisions. Among attempted-resuscitation patients, rates of transport and survival to hospital handover, to hospital discharge and to 6 months were 31.9%, 15.3%, 9.8% and 9.8%, respectively. Multivariable model showed that advanced airway management (adjusted OR 1.84; 95% CI 1.06 to 3.17), intravenous access (OR 5.04; 95% CI 2.43 to 10.45) and attendance of high acuity response unit (highly trained prehospital care clinicians) (OR 2.54; 95% CI 1.25 to 5.18) were associated with improved odds of survival to hospital handover.ConclusionsBy including all paramedic-attended patients, this study provides a more complete understanding of the epidemiology of out-of-hospital TCA. Contemporary survival rates from adult out-of-hospital TCA who receive resuscitation from paramedics may be higher than historically thought. Factors identified in this study as associated with survival may be useful to guide prognostication and treatment.


Author(s):  
Marie Benayoun ◽  
Marie-Charlotte Dutot ◽  
Céline Aboud ◽  
Kévin Serror ◽  
Marc Chaouat ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Deep soft tissue defects next to the joints can rapidly lead to irreversible damages and have to be covered urgently and effectively. In severely burned patients the usual approach is to use a flap even though it has its limitations in regards to the extent of the burn and the general condition of the patient. Case report A twenty seven-year-old male was admitted at the Burn Treatment Center for a thermic burn of seventy-two percent of his body surface area. At first he has benefited from several skin grafts and later on a major open right elbow had to be treated urgently to rescue the joint. Results After the burn, a revascularization of the donor site was noticed, sufficient to use the radial forearm pedicled flap as a cover for the elbow. This case reports an innovative approach based on the use of an irrigation and drainage system placed underneath the flap. The elbow was rigidly immobilized with an external fixator in order to facilitate an optimal healing of the flap. Conclusion In this case, the choice of this flap, combined with the irrigation and drainage system and the immobilization by external fixation, provided an original and efficient treatment. Post operatively the healing of the flap and of the donor site was complete. The functional results exceeded the expectations with a complete recovery of the joint amplitude. Thus, in case of no other therapeutic options, it is probably possible to use a variety of flaps recently healed.


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