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SECTION
III: BURN
WOUND: HISTOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT (ZONES OF INJURY)
The burn wound is
defined in terms of the evolving injury that occurs. Therefore
the histological description is defined in terms of specific
areas of pathologic change called zones. Three zones have been
classically described. The actual pathophysiology is now
recognized to be much more complex than the terms used for
defining the zones.
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Histological
Assessment of the Burn Wound
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A. Zone of coagulation
This
zone is comprised of the surface tissue necrosis of the
initial burn eschar. The surface injury is caused mainly by
the heat or chemical insult. Obviously this zone has an
irreversible injury.

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to Enlarge Image
Full
thickness burn (admission)
Zone of coagulation is the depth of tissue necrosis which, in
this patient, compress both s layers of skin
INSERT
IMAGE OF Mixed Depth Burn

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to Enlarge Image
Zone
of coagulation varies markedly from center of burn which is
full thickness, to the very periphery where all necrotic
tissue has been removed

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Enlarge Image
Zone
of necrosis has been removed. Wound bed is viable tissue
although injured (zone of injury) beneath the surface
B.
Zone of Injury (Stasis)
Deep and peripheral
to the zone of coagulation, there is a sizable area of tissue
injury where cells are viable but can easily be further
damaged. The terms "stasis" or "ischemia"
were used because the progressive injury in this area was
thought to be due to capillary thrombosis from injured
endothelium, leading to ischemia-induced cell death. Fibrin
deposition, vasoconstriction, and thrombosis indeed do occur,
most likely as a result of continued release of mediators.
However, early epithelial cell death in this area, unrelated
to blood flow, is reported to be quite high, leading to
slowing of healing. Epithelial cells are particularly prone to
environmental insults such as desiccation- and
inflammation-induced injury. This zone is most prominent in
mid-to-deep-dermal burns where there is less reserve in the
remaining viable cells and less blood flow.
C.
Zone of Hyperemia
Peripheral to and
below the zone of stasis is the zone of hyperemia. The area is
characterized by minimal cell injury but with vasodilatation
due to neighboring inflammation-induced mediators. Completed
recovery of this tissue is expected unless there is an
additional severe insult such as an invasive infection or
profound tissue inflammation.
ZONES
OF INJURY VARIES WITH BURN DEPTH

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INSERT
IMAGE OF MID DERMAL BURN FROM PARTIAL BURN SITE

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MID
DERMAL BURN IMAGE OF HAND

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the Image to Enlarge
This
mid-dermal burn has larger zone of injury than a more
superficial burn

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Image to Enlarge
DEEP
DERMAL BACK BURN

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Image to Enlarge
Deep
dermal back burn (with full thickness on flank) Dry white to
dry red appearance reflective of lack of surface blood flow.
The zone of injury below the surface is at high risk for
conversion to a full thickness wound.

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image to
Enlarge
IMAGE
OF FULL THICKNESS BURN TO BACK

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the Image to Enlarge
In a
full thickness burn, the zone of injury can readily extend
below the skin into subcutaneous tissues. The zone of
hyperemia develops in the subeschar area being most evident
beginning about 7 days post burn.
IMAGE
OF ZONE OF HYPEREMIA

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the Image to Enlarge
Zone
of hyperemia is very evident in this wound excised at day 10.
The blood flow to this fatty tissue is markedly increased over
normal sub-dermis vascularity.
D.
Wound Conversion
This term refers to
the dynamic process whereby the Zone of Injury progresses to
the Zone of Tissue Necrosis thereby deepening the wound.
Conversion is more likely with a mid to deep dermal injury
because of less blood flow, longer time to healing and
increased risk of excess inflammation and infection. Also
environmental hazards can readily lead to conversion of an
open wound.
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RISK
FACTORS FOR WOUND CONVERSION
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LOCAL
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SYSTEMATIC
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| Impaired
Blood Flow |
Septicemia |
increased
inflammation
(infection, open wound, irritants) |
hypovolemia |
| surface
desiccation |
excess
catabolism |
| surface
exudate buildup |
chronic
illness |
mechanical
trauma
(dressing changes, shearing) |
-- |
| chemical
trauma - topical agents |
-- |
PARTIAL
THICKNESS BURN

E. ZONES
OF INJURY IN TWO BURN DEPTHS
THE ZONES OF STASIS
OR INJURY AND HYPEREMIA (reaction) are much larger in a mid
dermal burn compared to a superficial burn. This larger zone
of injury exceeds the increase in size of the zone of
coagulation (necrosis) between the two depths.
The reason is that 1)
the best blood flow is present in the superficial dermis and
ischemia is a greater risk beyond that point, 2) once through
the epidermis, the heat transfer increases into the dermis
such that a deeper area of heat and inflammatory injury
results. A mid (or deep) dermal is much more prone to further
injury during the treatment period.
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Factors
Increasing Zone of Injury
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- lower
blood flow with a deeper burn
- increased
risk of infection with deeper burn
- presence
of surface necrotic tissue
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Partial
Thickness Burn Image

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Mid
to Deep Dermal Burn Treated with Silver Sulfadiazine
Admission:
Post-cleaning

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the Image to Enlarge
Conversion
can be noted on post-burn - Day 7

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the Image to Enlarge
Note:
Increased thickness of eschar with exudate build-up
F.
BURN EDEMA
A layer of
protein-rich edema fluid develops between the eschar (zone of
coagulation) and the per fused, heat-injured micro vessels as
a result of increased (heat and mediator-induced) micro
vascular permeability. The leak is most prominent in the first
8-12 hours but can persist for days. In superficial burns, the
edema actually physically separates viable and non-viable
tissue, producing blisters, so that mechanical cleaning can
remove the dead tissues. In deep second-degree and
third-degree burns, the edema occurs throughout the injured
tissue. However, the necrotic dermis remains physically
adherent to the sub dermal space and requires sharp dissection
(debridement) to remove the dead tissue or the process of
necrolysis must occur. This process is deleterious due to the
risk of infection and degree of tissue inflammation, as well
as absorption of dead tissue. The degree of tissue edema is
dependent on the amount of resuscitation fluid given and the
vascular pressures perfusing the area.

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Image to Enlarge
Note:
Edema developing below the zone of coagulation is very
prominent in facial burns
Sect. II  Sect.
IV |