Template:Burn thickness chart

Revision as of 19:19, 15 November 2023 by Rossdonaldson1 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "===Burn Thickness Chart<ref>Haines E, et al. Optimizing emergency management to reduce morbidity and mortality in pediatric burn patients. Pediatric Emergency Medicine Practice. 12(5):1-23. EB Medicine.</ref>=== {| class="wikitable" |- ! Thickness ! Deepest Skin Structure Involved ! Pain & Sensation ! Appearance ! Expected Course ! Image |- | '''Superficial (first-degree)''' | *Epidermis | *Painful | *Dry, erythema (no blisters) *Blanching (intact cap refill) | *H...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Burn Thickness Chart[1]

Thickness Deepest Skin Structure Involved Pain & Sensation Appearance Expected Course Image
Superficial (first-degree)
  • Epidermis
  • Painful
  • Dry, erythema (no blisters)
  • Blanching (intact cap refill)
  • Heals without scarring, 5-10 days

Sunburn.jpg

Superficial Partial (second-degree)
  • Superficial dermis (papillary region)
  • Painful
  • Wet, pale pink, blisters
  • Blanching (intact cap refill)
  • Heals without scarring, <3 weeks

Hand2ndburn.jpg Scaldburn.jpg

Deep Partial (second-degree)
  • Deep dermis (reticular region)
  • Decreased sensation
  • Pale white-yellow, blisters
  • Does not blanch (absent cap refill)
  • Heals in 3-8 weeks
  • Likely to scar if healing >3 weeks
  • May require skin-graft if does not heal within 3 weeks

Major-2nd-degree-burn.jpg

Full (third-degree)
  • Hypodermis (subcutaneous tissue)
  • Decreased sensation
  • White, leathery
  • Does not blanch (absent cap refill)
  • Heals by contracture, >8 weeks
  • Almost always requires skin grafting

8-day-old-3rd-degree-burn.jpg

Fourth-degree
  • Underlying fat, muscle and bone
  • Decreased sensation
  • Black; charred with eschar
  • Does not blanch (absent cap refill)
  • Does not heal
  • Frequently requires amputation

Ожог кисть.jpg

  1. Haines E, et al. Optimizing emergency management to reduce morbidity and mortality in pediatric burn patients. Pediatric Emergency Medicine Practice. 12(5):1-23. EB Medicine.