The most important component of providing the initial assessment of a patient with a burn injury is to NOT be distracted by the burn injury. You should proceed with a primary and secondary survey, just as you would in any patient with a traumatic injury mechanism.
Primary Survey
- A- Airway
- Use 100% oxygen during your assessment
- Is the patient’s airway at risk?
- Progressive edema?
- Likelihood of inhalation injury? (link inhalation injury page here)
- Intubation really isn’t the wrong answer if you’re concerned about the security and stability of a patient’s airway
- B- Breathing
- Are they breathing spontaneously?
- Expose the patient’s chest to be able to visually assess their ability to ventilate
- Do they have a circumferential torso burn?
- Do they have apparently adequate chest expansion after establishment of a secure airway?
- C- Circulation
- Assess patient’s pulse and blood pressure- just like in a trauma
- Establish IV access
- You CAN go through fresh burn- just remember that tape won’t work to affix it
- Evaluate extremities for circumferential injury
- Circumferential burn results in an increased risk of compartment syndrome and possible need for escharotomy
- Don’t forget to take off jewelry- especially rings!!!
- D- Disability
- AVPU or GCS…again, exactly what you would do for trauma
- If a burn patient has altered mental status, it is NOT the burn that is the cause
- Intoxication?
- Carbon monoxide poisoning?
- Concomitant trauma with brain injury?
- E-Exposure
- Remember to get all clothing off, particularly if there’s a possibility it’s extending/ deepening the burning process
- Burn patients get cold EASILY. Warm the room, warm the fluids, warm the blankets.
Secondary Survey
- Again, use your trauma knowledge
- Perform a thorough head-to-toe evaluation and don’t be distracted by the burn
- Is other trauma present?
- Is there a need for immobilization?
- Obtain event history- etiology, mechanism
- Obtain your AMPLE history as well
- Determine depth and extent of burn