• J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio) · Apr 2012

    Review

    Severe burn injury, burn shock, and smoke inhalation injury in small animals. Part 2: diagnosis, therapy, complications, and prognosis.

    • Lindsay Vaughn, Nicole Beckel, and Patricia Walters.
    • New England Animal Medical Center, West Bridgewater, MA 02379, USA. anmldrlav@gmail.com
    • J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio). 2012 Apr 1;22(2):187-200.

    ObjectiveTo review the evaluation and treatment of patients suffering from severe burn injury (SBI), burn shock, and smoke inhalation injury. Potential complications and prognosis associated with SBI are also discussed.DiagnosisDiagnosis of burn injury and burn shock is based on patient history and clinical presentation. Superficial burn wounds may not be readily apparent for the first 48 h whereas more severe wounds will be evident at presentation. Patients are diagnosed with local or SBI by estimating total body surface area involved using the 'Rule of Nines' or the Lund-Browder chart adapted from the human literature.TherapyPatients suffering from SBI require immediate and aggressive fluid therapy. Burn wounds require prompt cooling to prevent progressive tissue damage. Due to significant pain associated with burn wounds and therapeutic procedures, multimodal analgesia is recommended. Daily wound management including hydrotherapy, topical medications, and early wound excision and grafting is necessary with SBI.ComplicationsThere are numerous complications associated with SBI. The most common complications include infections, hypothermia, intra-abdominal hypertension, and abdominal compartment syndrome.PrognosisThe prognosis of SBI in domestic animals is unknown. Based on information derived from human literature, patients with SBI and concomitant smoke inhalation likely have a worse prognosis than those with SBI or smoke inhalation alone.© Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society 2012.

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