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Burn
is defined as tissue damage caused by a variety of agents,
such as heat, chemicals, electricity, sunlight, or nuclear
radiation. Most common are burns caused by scalds, building
fires, and flammable liquids and gases.
The
attorneys and staff at The Dilley Law Firm bring extensive
medical and legal knowledge and decades of trial and mediation
experience to the successful handling of cases involving
burn injuries for the burn victims and their families. If
you have either a legal or a medical-legal question with
which we may assist you, call us toll free at 1-800-460-0111
or e-mail us at ida@dilleylawfirm.com
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- First-degree
burns affect only the outer layer (called the epidermis)
of the skin.
- Second-degree
burns damage the epidermis and the layer beneath it (called
the dermis).
- Third-degree
burns involve damage or complete destruction of the skin
to its full depth and damage to underlying tissues. People
who experience such burns often require skin grafting.
- The
swelling and blistering characteristic of burns are caused
by the loss of fluid from damaged blood vessels.
- In
severe cases, such fluid loss can cause shock, requiring
immediate transfusion of the patient with blood or a physiological
salt solution to restore adequate fluid levels to maintain
blood pressure.
Burns often lead to infection, due to damage to the skin's
protective barrier. In many cases, topical antibiotics
(creams or ointments applied to the skin) can prevent
or treat such infection. Each year in the United States,
1.25 million burn injuries require medical attention.
- Approximately
50,000 of these require hospitalization, and roughly half
of those burn patients are admitted to a specialized burn
unit.
- Up
to 10,000 people in the United States die every year of
burn-related infections; pneumonia is the most common
infectious complication among hospitalized burn patients.
- Twenty
years ago, burns covering half the body were routinely
fatal; today, patients with burns covering 90 percent
of the body can survive (but often with permanent impairments).
- Practices
that have contributed to this improvement include advances
in resuscitation, wound cleaning and follow-up care, nutritional
support, and infection control.
- Grafting
with natural or artificial materials can also speed the
healing process.
- Complications
following injury, shock, or burns may occur long after
the initial incident, often when the patient is in an
intensive care unit (ICU). Many ICU patients face similar
medical problems regardless of the reason for their admission
into the unit.The leading causes of death in ICUs are
multiple organ system dysfunction, in which several of
the body's organs fail at once, and adult respiratory
distress syndrome, in which the lungs in particular fail.
In both conditions, the organs of the body are ravaged
by the patient's own immune system, leading to severe,
debilitating, and uncontrolled inflammation. Improving
methods of wound healing and tissue repair offers tremendous
opportunities to enhance the quality of life for trauma
and burn patients, and may also help to reduce health
care cost
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