A burn is a type of injury that may be caused by heat, electricity, chemicals, light, radiation, or friction. Burns can be highly variable in terms of the tissue affected, the severity, and resultant complications. Muscle, bone, blood vessel, dermal and epidermal tissue can all be damaged with subsequent pain due to profound injury to nerves. Depending on the location affected and the degree of severity, a burn victim may experience a wide number...
more
Read article at Wikipedia
Burn
Medicine
Treatments:
- Naproxen
- Neosporin
- Escharotomy
- Silver sulfadiazine
- Rehydration
- Bacitracin
- Kalanchoe
- Ibuprofen
- Skin grafting
- Lidocaine
Causes:
View entire collection »Includes Diseases:
View entire collection »Associated medical specialties:
View entire collection »Diseases or conditions caused:
Diseases with this Risk Factor:
Similar topics in Freebase
-
Pancreatic cancer
Pancreatic cancer is a malignant neoplasm of the pancreas. Each year in the United States, about 42,470 individuals are diagnosed with this condition and 35,240 die from the disease. The prognosis is relatively poor but has improved; the three-year survival rate is now about thirty percent ... -
Asthma
Asthma is characterized by a predisposition to chronic inflammation of the lungs in which the airways (bronchi) are reversibly narrowed. Asthma affects 7% of the population of the United States, and 300 million worldwide. During asthma attacks (exacerbations of asthma), the smooth muscle cells in... -
Scarlet fever
Scarlet fever is a disease caused by an erythrogenic exotoxin released by Streptococcus pyogenes. The term Scarlatina may be used interchangeably with Scarlet Fever, though it is commonly used to indicate the less acute form of Scarlet Fever that is often seen since the beginning of the twentieth... -
Systemic scleroderma
Systemic scleroderma is a systemic connective tissue disease. It is also known as "systemic sclerosis". In the skin, scleroderma causes hardening and scarring. The skin may appear tight, reddish or scaly. Blood vessels may also be more visible. Where large areas are affected, fat and muscle wastage... -
Uveal melanoma
Uveal melanoma is a cancer (melanoma) of the eye involving the iris, ciliary body, or choroid (collectively referred to as the uvea). Tumors arise from the pigment cells (melanocytes) that reside within the uvea giving color to the eye. These melanocytes are distinct from the Retinal pigment... -
Neuroectodermal tumor
A neuroectodermal tumor is a tumor of the central or peripheral nervous system. This article includes text from the U.S. National Cancer Institute's public domain Dictionary of Cancer Terms