ACUTE
THERMAL BURN INJURY
Rationale
Severe thermal injury is one of the most
devastating physical and psychological injuries a person can suffer. Over 2
million burn injuries are brought to medical attention in the United States per
year. Of these, there are 14,000 deaths
and approximately 20,000 sustain injuries requiring admission to a specialized
burn unit.(1) About 75,000 patients require hospitalization each
year, and 25,000 of those remain hospitalized for more than 2 months.(2)
The most common mechanisms of burn injury are flame and scalding, and the upper
extremity, head and neck are the most common body areas involved.(3)
Goals of burn treatment include survival
of the patient with rapid wound healing, minimal scarring and abnormal
pigmentation, and cost-effectiveness.
The optimal outcome is restoration, as nearly as possible, to the
pre-burn quality of health and psychological well being.(4)
The burn wound is a complex and dynamic
injury characterized by a central zone of coagulation, surrounded by an area of
stasis, and bordered by an area of erythema. The zone of coagulation or
complete capillary occlusion may progress by a factor of 10 during the first 48
hours after injury; local microcirculation is compromised to the worst extent
12-24 hours post-burn. Burns are in this dynamic state of change for up to 72
hours after injury.(1)
Ischemic necrosis quickly follows. Hematologic changes, including
platelet microthrombi and hemoconcentration, occur in the postcapillary
venules. Edema formation is rapid in the area of the injury; factors include
increased capillary permeability, decreased plasma oncotic pressure, increased
interstitial oncotic pressure, changes in interstitial space compliance, and
lymphatic damage.(5) Edema is
most prominent in directly involved burned tissues, but also develops in
distant, uninjured tissue, including muscle, intestine and lung.
Changes occur in the distant
microvasculature including red cell aggregation, white cell adhesion to venular
walls, and platelet thromboemboli.(6) Inflammatory
mediators are elaborated locally in part from activated platelets, macrophages,
and leukocytes, contribute to local and systemic hyperpermeability of the
microcirculation and appear histologically as gaps in the venular and capillary
endothelium.(7) This
progressive process may extend damage dramatically during the early days after
injury.(8) The ongoing tissue
damage in thermal injury is due to multiple factors including the failure of
the surrounding tissue to supply borderline cells with oxygen and nutrients
necessary to sustain viability,(9) capillary or microvascular
occlusion in deeper burns leading to decreased perfusion of the burned tissue,
and destruction of lymphatics resulting in impaired absorption. The impediment
of circulation below the injury leads to desiccation of the wound, as fluid
cannot be supplied via the thrombosed or obstructed capillaries. Topical agents
and dressings may reduce, but cannot prevent, desiccation of the burn wound and
the inexorable progression to deeper layers.
Altered permeability is not caused by heat injury alone. Oxidants and other mediators (prostaglandins,
kinins and histamine) also contribute to vascular permeability. Neutrophils are a major source of oxidants
and injury in the ischemia-reperfusion mechanism. This complex process may be favorably
effected by several interventions.
A decrease in edema formation has a marked
positive proactive impact, especially on the early hemodynamic instability, as
well as the later wound conversion from partial to full thickness injury,(2)
defining a role for the use of adjunctive hyperbaric oxygen therapy as a
modulator of inflammation.
Infection
Infection remains the leading overall cause of death from
burns. Susceptibility to infection is
greatly increased due to the loss of the integumentary barrier to bacterial
invasion, the ideal substrate present in the burn wound, and the compromised or
obstructed microvasculature that prevents humoral and cellular elements from
reaching the injured tissue.
Additionally, the immune system is seriously affected, demonstrating
decreased levels of immunoglobulins and serious perturbations of polymorphonuclear
leukocyte (PMNL) function including a reduction in chemotaxis, phagocytosis and
diminished killing ability,(10) resulting in increased morbidity and
mortality. Patients with specific polymorphisms in the tumor necrosis factor
and bacterial recognition genes have a higher incidence of sepsis than the burn
injury alone would predict.(11)
Regeneration cannot take place until equilibrium is reached;
hence, healing is retarded. Prolongation of the healing process may lead to
excessive scarring. Hypertrophic scars are seen in only 4% of cases requiring
10 days to heal, but up to 40% of cases requiring longer than 21 days to heal.(12)
Therapy of burns, therefore, must be directed toward minimizing edema,
preserving marginally viable tissue, protecting the microvasculature, enhancing
host defenses, and promoting wound closure.
Adjunctive HBO2
therapy can benefit each of these problems directly, and shows promise in the
treatment of inhalation injury.
______________________
More Information and References can be found
in the 12th Edition of the Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Indications
Book. For Sale on
the UHMS
Publications page.