How is the depth of a pediatric burn determined?
I-degree burns (erythema burns): no blisters, generally 3-5 days to heal, no scar, short-term hyperpigmentation.
I-degree burns (erythema burns): no blisters, generally 3-5 days to heal, no scar, short-term hyperpigmentation.
Most pediatric burns are due to inadequate care or negligence, and life burns account for the majority of injuries. Therefore, according to different ages, living habits and conditions, we should…
1. Children have almost no self-help ability when they are burned, so sometimes the burns are very serious. 2. The poor compensatory capacity of circulatory volume after burns in children requires…
1, hot liquid burns (accounting for more than 90% of pediatric burns) 2, electrical burns 3, strong acid burns 4, strong alkali burns 5, thermal pressure injuries 6, inhalation injuries…
Because pediatric has its own peculiarities in anatomy and physiology, the response to stimuli such as trauma, shock and sepsis is different from that of adults, and the resistance also…
Summer is a high incidence season for burns because of the hot weather, thin clothing and exposed skin. Among burn patients, children under 10 years old account for 50%, especially…
Burn injury is a common and multiple trauma, which can occur in all kinds of people, and the incidence is significantly higher in pediatric patients than in adults and elderly…
Pediatric burns are still a relatively common trauma in our city. In recent years, with the increase of foreign population, seasonal changes, economic conditions, living habits and climate change, the…
There are often accidents in the family where children are burned or scalded, but because parents often do not do emergency treatment, they miss the opportunity to save the child…
When a baby is injured, parents want to treat it in a way that causes the least pain and leaves the least scarring. There are some very superficial cuts that…