Airway maintenance
Airway maintenance is the first stage in management of the major burn. At all times the cervical spine must be maintained in a neutral position with either constant manual support or a hard collar, sand bags and tape over the frontal region of the head.
If the patient cannot talk, the airway may not be patent. Immediate measures include:
- look inside the mouth - note any foreign bodies, evidence of a burn or inhalation injury:
- oedema
- blistering
- black, sooty deposits
- remove any obstruction with a sweep of the finger forward or, if available, use the suction of a Yankauer tube
- open the airway with a chin lift or jaw thrust manoeuvre avoiding excessive flexion or extension of the cervical spine
- secure the airway if the patient is having difficulty maintaining e.g. due to facial or pharyngeal burns; measures include:
- Guedel airway
- nasopharyngeal airway
- endotracheal tube
- emergency cricothyroidotomy
Once the airway is secure, give 100% oxygen at 8 litres per minute. See the submenu for further airway management.
Wheezing may respond to inhaled bronchodilators. If a major upper or lower airway burn is suspected, consider elective intubation and ventilation before the patient's condition deteriorates.
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