- Infection Control
- Infection control measures are of utmost importance until complete
healing. Infection is one of the most common and serious complications of
burns:
- Standard infection control precautions (e.g., wearing
sterile gloves when handling patients).
- Strict wound management (changing dressings, early
debridement).
- Isolate “new” patients (<7 days from burn) from
those in the recovery phase (≥7 days from burn).
- Antibiotics should not be administered unless there
is systemic infection.
Infection is defined by at least two of the following
four signs:
- Temperature > 38.5°C or < 36°C
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnea
- Increase in white blood cell count by more than 100% (or significant
decrease in white blood cell count).
For systemic infections, initiate empirical antibiotic
treatment:
- Intravenous Cefazolin:
- Children >1 month: 25 mg/kg every 8 hours
- Adults: 2 g every 8 hours
- Oral Ciprofloxacin:
- Children >1 month: 15 mg/kg twice a day
- Adults: 500 mg three times a day
- For local infections, in the absence of systemic infection signs,
treat with topical silver sulfadiazine. Do not apply in children under 2
months of age.
Other Treatments
- Intravenous Omeprazole starting on day 1:
- Children: 1 mg/kg once daily
- Adults: 40 mg once daily
- Tetanus vaccination
- Prevention of thrombosis:
low-molecular-weight heparin subcutaneously after 48-72 hours of injury.
- Physical therapy from day 1 (prevention of contractures) and pain
relief are essential.
- Intentional burns (suicide attempt, assault): appropriate psychological follow-up.