Advanced burn wound care with specialized dressings and skin substitutes—mobile treatment for second and third-degree burns.
Burn wounds result from thermal, chemical, electrical, or radiation injury destroying skin and underlying tissue. Over 1 million burn injuries occur annually in the US. While minor burns (first-degree) heal with basic care, second and third-degree burns require specialist management to prevent infection, scarring, contractures, and other serious complications.
Only epidermis affected. Red, painful, no blisters. Sunburn typical example. Heals in 3-7 days without scarring. Usually doesn't require specialist care.
Epidermis and upper dermis. Blisters, very painful, pink/red moist wound bed. Heals in 2-3 weeks with proper care. May scar if infected. Requires specialist wound care.
Deeper into dermis. White or yellow appearance, less painful (nerve endings damaged). Takes 3-8 weeks to heal. High scarring risk. Often requires skin grafts.
All skin layers destroyed. White, brown, or black. Leathery texture. No pain (nerves destroyed). Won't heal without surgery. Requires excision and grafting.
Through skin into muscle, tendon, or bone. Life-threatening. Requires emergency hospital care, possible amputation. Not treated in outpatient setting.
Burns create unique healing challenges:
Thermal injury kills cells and damages blood vessels. Dead tissue (eschar) must be removed before healing begins.
Skin barrier destroyed. Burn wounds are sterile initially but quickly colonize with bacteria. Pseudomonas particularly common and dangerous.
Burns trigger massive inflammatory response. Prolonged inflammation delays healing and promotes scarring/contractures.
Hair follicles, sweat glands, and skin appendages destroyed. Deep burns lack cells needed for resurfacing—grafting required.
Infection (sepsis risk 20-30% in large burns), hypertrophic scarring and keloids, contractures limiting joint mobility, chronic pain, cosmetic disfigurement, and psychological trauma. Early specialist care dramatically reduces these complications.
Accurate burn depth assessment guides treatment. Superficial partial thickness heals conservatively. Deep partial/full thickness may need grafting referral.
Remove loose eschar and dead tissue. Preserve viable tissue. Enzymatic debridement or gentle sharp debridement depending on depth and patient tolerance.
Silver sulfadiazine, Acticoat (silver dressings), Aquacel AG, hydrogels for pain relief, non-adherent dressings prevent trauma during changes. Dressing options.
Integra, acellular dermal matrices, or amniotic membranes for deep partial thickness burns. Reduces scarring and speeds healing. Learn more.
Pressure garments, silicone gel sheets, massage therapy, range of motion exercises. Start during healing to minimize contractures and hypertrophic scarring.
Burn assessment and depth evaluation, pain management (coordinate with physician), dressing changes with specialized burn products, debridement as appropriate, infection monitoring, range of motion assessment, scar prevention strategies, supplies for dressing changes, and education on burn care and warning signs. Visits typically 2-3 times weekly initially, then weekly as healing progresses.
Go to ER if: burn covers >10% body surface area, full thickness burn any size, chemical or electrical burn, burn to airway (face/neck with inhalation), circumferential burns (around limb/chest), signs of infection with fever, or burn in very young or elderly patient with other health conditions.
Medicare Part B covers burn wound care including dressings, debridement, and skin substitutes when medically necessary. Coverage identical to other wound types. Medicare details.
First-degree: 3–7 days. Superficial second-degree: 2–3 weeks. Deep second-degree: 3–8 weeks (may require grafting). Third-degree: will not heal without surgery. Healing depends on size, depth, location, age, overall health, and quality of care.
No. Intact blisters provide a sterile protective barrier and support optimal healing. Popping them greatly increases the risk of infection. If a blister breaks on its own, keep the area clean and consult a wound specialist. Large blisters may need professional drainage.
First-degree burns do not scar. Superficial second-degree burns usually leave minimal scarring with proper care. Deep second-degree and third-degree burns always scar. Scar severity depends on depth, infection prevention, and scar management techniques such as silicone or pressure therapy.
Cool the burn with running (not ice-cold) water for 10–20 minutes. Remove tight clothing or jewelry before swelling starts. Cover with a clean, dry cloth. Do not apply ice, butter, oils, or ointments. Seek medical care for anything more than minor burns.
Specialized burn treatment with advanced dressings—preventing infection and minimizing scarring.
Healix360 Advanced mobile wound care specialists connecting patients with regenerative healing solutions. Medicare Part B accepted.
6618 San Fernando Rd Glendale Ca 91201
Copyright © 2026 Healix360.com. All Rights Reserved.