Burn Wound Care Strategies for the Battlefield and Austere Settings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Be prepared to modify how things are performed “back home” and approach burn care with flexibility and common sense [5].
- Family and friends may need to participate in burn care and physical therapy [6].
- Management of burns ≤ 20% total body surface area (TBSA) may need to be managed on an outpatient basis.
2. Point of Injury
- Life-threatening injuries must be identified and treated prior to managing burn injuries.
- The initial estimation of burn severity should focus on TBSA and not burn depth.
- First-aid wound care consists of cooling the burn while maintaining normothermia and covering the wounds with clean, dry dressings.
3. Point of Stabilization
- Use frequent, moderate doses of IV narcotics for initial pain management.
- Wash and debride wounds of devitalized tissue with an antiseptic such as chlorhexidine gluconate.
- Have a strategy to minimize hypothermia.
- Consider prophylactic escharotomies in high-risk patients prior to a long evacuation when it will be difficult to perform en-route.
4. Prolonged Wound Management
- Although logistically challenging on the battlefield, alternating 8.5% mafenide acetate and 1% silver sulfadiazine creams is unmatched in efficacy.
- 8.5% mafenide acetate cream should be used for suspected Gram-negative wound infections, if available.
- Traditional wound dressings may not be available in sufficient supply, and improvisation with locally available materials may be necessary.
- Silver-impregnated dressings are less bulky, easier to transport, and reduce the frequency of required dressing changes, but they require prior and complete wound cleansing and debridement.
- Examine wounds frequently and adjust the burn wound management plan as needed.
5. Care of Specialized Areas
6. Skin Substitutes and Off-the-Shelf Products
7. Position and Splinting Techniques
8. Operative Burn Management on the Battlefield
- For those casualties who can be evacuated out of the combat zone, care on the battlefield remains focused on initial stabilization rather than on definitive care.
- Casualties who cannot be evacuated from the combat zone with ≥50% TBSA burns will likely be triaged into the expectant category.
- Assessment of burn depth is key to formulating a definitive wound management strategy.
- Superficial and indeterminate-depth burns mandate a trial of non-operative management.
- Never excise an uninfected burn without performing coverage with an autograft or a skin substitute at the same operation.
- Conserve blood through restrictive transfusion strategies and utilize measures to minimize blood loss.
9. Triage and Wound Care Recommendations Based on Capability
10. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Topical Therapy | Activity, Indications and Advantages | Considerations |
---|---|---|
Petroleum-based ointments |
|
|
1% silver sulfadiazine cream |
|
|
8.5% mafenide acetate cream |
|
|
Cerium nitrate |
| |
0.5% silver nitrate solution (AgNO3) |
| |
0.125%, 0.25%, 0.5% Sodium hypochlorite solution |
|
|
0.5–5% acetic acid solution |
| |
2% Mupirocin ointment, cream |
|
|
100,000 units/gm Nystatin cream, ointment, powder |
|
|
Category | Activity, Indications and Advantages | Considerations |
---|---|---|
Gauze dressings |
|
|
Non-adherent dressings |
|
|
Silver impregnated dressings |
|
|
Foam dressings |
|
|
Hydrofiber dressings |
|
|
Soft-silicone based dressings |
|
|
Film dressings |
|
|
Resorbable dressings |
|
|
Negative pressure Wound dressing (NPWD) |
|
|
Alternative | Indications and Advantages | Considerations |
---|---|---|
Plastic wrap (e.g., cling film) |
|
|
Alternatives for gauze bandages |
|
|
Honey |
|
|
Banana Leaf |
|
|
Moist exposed burn ointment (MEBO) |
|
|
Immediate Evacuation | Delayed Evacuation | Prolonged Evacuation/Mass Casualty/Austere | |
---|---|---|---|
Evacuation and Resupply Capability | Evacuation to a burn-capable facility within 24 h of injury | Evacuation to a burn-capable facility within 72 h |
|
Triage |
| ||
Initial Management Point | |||
Treatments |
| ||
Stabilization Point | |||
Treatments |
| ||
Wound considerations | Cover burns with clean dry sheet |
|
|
Prolonged Wound Management | |||
Treatments | N/A |
| |
Wound considerations | N/A | N/A |
|
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Shingleton, S.; Folwell, J.; Jones, I.; Gleason, M.; Williams, A. Burn Wound Care Strategies for the Battlefield and Austere Settings. Eur. Burn J. 2024, 5, 49-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj5010005
Shingleton S, Folwell J, Jones I, Gleason M, Williams A. Burn Wound Care Strategies for the Battlefield and Austere Settings. European Burn Journal. 2024; 5(1):49-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj5010005
Chicago/Turabian StyleShingleton, Sarah, Jared Folwell, Ian Jones, Michael Gleason, and Alicia Williams. 2024. "Burn Wound Care Strategies for the Battlefield and Austere Settings" European Burn Journal 5, no. 1: 49-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/ebj5010005