نتایج جستجو برای: partial thickness burn

تعداد نتایج: 355052  

Journal: :Pediatrics in review 2004
Gordon L Klein David N Herndon

Definitions It is very important for the clinician caring for a burn victim to know the depth, or degree, of burn. A first-degree burn is superficial, dry, painful to touch, and heals in less than 1 week. A second-degree burn is partial thickness and pink or possibly mottled red. It exhibits bullae or frank weeping on the surface. It usually is painful unless classified as deep and heals in 1 t...

2011
Minekatsu Akimoto Akira Takeda Kazutaka Nagashima Rie Uehara Mitsuru Nemoto Eiju Uchinuma

There have been many cases of burn patients who also suffer from psychiatric problems, including eating disorders. We present a case of a 38-year-old female with an eating disorder and depression who became light-headed and fell, spilling boiling water from a kettle on herself at home sustaining partial thickness and full thickness burns over 5% of her total body surface area: left buttock and ...

2011
Yiu-Hei Ching Thomas L. Sutton Yvonne N. Pierpont Martin C. Robson Wyatt G. Payne

OBJECTIVE Certain cytokines, especially those known as growth factors, have been demonstrated to mediate or modulate burn wound healing. Experimental and clinical evidence suggests that there are therapeutic advantages to the wound healing process when these agents are utilized. Positive effects have been reported for 4 types of wounds seen in the burn patient: partial-thickness wounds, full-th...

Journal: :Ostomy/wound management 2007
Andrew Burd

Comprehensive burn wound management comprises a challenging spectrum of acute, chronic, traumatic, and surgical wounds with a wide range of anatomical locations and depth. When processing of porcine and cadaver skin - items central to burn care management strategies - became problematic at one Hong Kong hospital, a commercially available cost-effective substitute dressing was urgently needed. A...

Journal: :Journal of drugs in dermatology : JDD 2009
Jill Waibel Kenneth Beer

Burn scars are the result of wound healing following a partial-thickness or full-thickness thermal injury. Thermal injury can frequently result in extensive scarring, which may have profound psychologic impact on the victim, serving as a visible and palpable reminder of a traumatic event. Standard treatments for scars include the use of skin grafts, intralesional steroid injections, and pulsed-...

2016
D Poranki C Goodwin M Van Dyke

Partial thickness burns can advance to full thickness after initial injury due to inadequate tissue perfusion and increased production of inflammatory cytokines, which has been referred to as burn wound progression. In previous work, we demonstrated that a keratin biomaterial hydrogel appeared to reduce burn wound progression. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that a modified kerat...

Journal: :American family physician 2012
Emillia C O Lloyd Blake C Rodgers Michael Michener Michael S Williams

Most burn injuries can be managed on an outpatient basis by primary care physicians. Prevention efforts can significantly lower the incidence of burns, especially in children. Burns should be managed in the same manner as any other trauma, including a primary and secondary survey. Superficial burns can be treated with topical application of lotions, honey, aloe vera, or antibiotic ointment. Par...

Journal: :Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association 2007
Nathan A Kemalyan

The objective of this study was to analyze which materials and methods are used for the management of partial and full thickness burns, as well as donor sites. An Internet survey was used to poll directors of burn centers around the world on their preferences for local treatment of different types of burns and donor sites. Results were tabulated and expressed as a percentage of the total number...

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