Burn Management

Burn Management

Module Summary

Initial treatment of burns to the face is similar to management of burns of the rest of the body. After initial patient stabilization, the next step is operative debridement back to healthy tissue. With burns to the face there is an increased risk of inhalational injury, which compromises the patient’s airway. Due to the complex anatomy of the face, attention during reconstruction must be paid to the facial subunits. If any section of a subunit is damaged, then the entire subunit will be excised and reconstructed en bloc. Areas of additional reconstructive complexity include the ears, eyelids, nose, and oral commissure. During recovery from facial burns, special attention must be paid to physical therapy the psychological recovery of the patient.

Module Learning Objectives 
  1. Review the pathophysiology of cutaneous burn injury.
  2. Describe the anatomy of the face in terms of facial subunits.
  3. Explain the non-surgical treatments for burns.
  4. Describe the surgical treatment of facial burns.
  5. Review the new innovations in facial burns treatment, including imaging modalities and full-face transplant.
  6. Recognize the importance of rehabilitation and treatment of psychological sequelae of facial burns.

Anatomy

Pathogenesis

Basic Science

Learning Objectives 
  1. Understand the process of wound healing and scar formation as it relates to burn injuries

Incidence

Learning Objectives 
  1. Understand the patient demographics and common causes of facial burns.

Patient Evaluation

Learning Objectives 
  1. Understand the initial evaluation of the facial burns patient, including the need for acute surgical intervention.
  2. Use the rule of nines and the Lund Browder charts for evaluation of total body surface area percentage.

Measurement of Functional Status

Learning Objectives 
  1. Understand the value of ophthalmologic evaluation for patients with periorbital burns.

Imaging

Treatment

Medical Therapies

Pharmacology

Learning Objectives 
  1. Understand the possible value of post-burn beta-blockade.

Surgical Therapies

Learning Objectives 
  1. Understand the process of acute treatment of burns with surgical excision
  2. Understand the similarities and differences between reconstruction after burns and trauma.
  3. Describe the difficulties in treating burns of the ears, eyelids, nose, and oral commissures
  4. Describe the treatment algorithm for surgical repair of a burn to the neck.
  5. Describe the value of laser scar revision in the chronic treatment of burn scars.
  6. Understand the possible role of prosthodontics in oral commissure burns.
  7. Understand the emerging field of full-face transplant as a treatment for massive facial burn injury
References 
  1. Mosier MJ, Gibran NS. Surgical excision of the burn wound. Clin Plast Surg. 2009 Oct;36(4):617-25. doi: 10.1016/j.cps.2009.05.006.
  2. Klein MB, Moore ML, Costa B, Engrav LH. Primer on the management of face burns at the University of Washington. J Burn Care Rehabil. 2005 Jan-Feb;26(1):2-6.
  3. Bernard SL. Reconstruction of the burned nose and ear. Clin Plast Surg. 2000 Jan;27(1):97-112.
  4. Ramachandra T, Ries WR. Management of Nasal and Perinasal Soft Tissue Injuries. Facial Plast Surg. 2015 Jun;31(3):194-200. doi: 10.1055/s-0035-1555619. Epub 2015 Jun 30.
  5. Malhotra R1, Sheikh I, Dheansa B. The management of eyelid burns. Surv Ophthalmol. 2009 May-Jun;54(3):356-71. doi: 10.1016/j.survophthal.2009.02.009.
  6. Tsai FC, Mardini S, Chen DJ, Yang JY, Hsieh MS. The classification and treatment algorithm for post-burn cervical contractures reconstructed with free flaps. Burns. 2006;32(5):626.
  7. Parrett BM, Donelan MB. Pulsed dye laser in burn scars: current concepts and future directions. Burns. 2010 Jun;36(4):443-9. doi: 10.1016/j.burns.2009.08.015. Epub 2009 Dec 21.
  8. Linebaugh ML1, Koka S. Oral electrical burns: etiology, histopathology, and prosthodontic treatment. J Prosthodont. 1993 Jun;2(2):136-41.
  9. Sosin M, Ceradini DJ, Levine JP, Hazen A, Staffenberg DA, Saadeh PB, Flores RL, Sweeney NG, Bernstein GL, Rodriguez ED. Total Face, Eyelids, Ears, Scalp, and Skeletal Subunit Transplant: A Reconstructive Solution for the Full Face and Total Scalp Burn. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2016 Jul;138(1):205-19. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000002322.

Rehabilitation

Staging

Case Studies

  1. A 54-year-old male was cooking when grease when it splashed up causing blistering burns to the face. The burn involves the left face, including the oral commissure and nasolabial fold. What is the initial treatment for this burn? What areas must be resected and reconstructed?
  2. A 28-year-old woman is a victim of an assault with acid. She was treated appropriately at the nearest burn center and was discharged without incident. She returns to the clinic 6 months after her initial hospitalization and is developing contractures of her neck and mouth leading to restricted extension of the neck and oral incompetence. Her facial and neck scars are now hypertrophic. What are the options for revision of her scars? What kind of function can she expect to regain and on what time frame?

Complications

Review

Review Questions 
  • A 37 yo man falls from a ladder and strikes his neck on the way down. Several hours after injury, flexible laryngoscopy demonstrates ecchymosis and edema of the vocal aryiepiglottic folds and piriform sinus on the right. The right false vocal fold has a eccymotic bulge, but there are no lacerations. His right vocal fold is sluggish. His airway is patent and no intervention is needed. CT scan demonstrates a right single thyroid cartilage fracture which is displaced. According to the Schaefer classification of laryngeal trauma, what is his injury group?