| Region | Adult % | Child % |
|---|---|---|
| Head | 9 | 18 |
| Each arm | 9 | 9 |
| Chest (ant) | 18 | 18 |
| Back | 18 | 18 |
| Each leg | 18 | 14 |
| Perineum | 1 | 1 |
Haglund, V. L., & Phillips, J. (2023). Anesthesia for burn patients. In S. Elisha, J. S. Heiner, & J. J. Nagelhout (Eds.), Nurse anesthesia (7th ed., pp. 917-929). Elsevier.
The Parkland (Baxter) formula estimates 24 hour crystalloid needs after a significant burn: 4 mL x weight in kg x percent TBSA burned, using lactated Ringer's (Haglund & Phillips, 2023, p. 920). Only partial thickness and full thickness burns count toward percent TBSA; superficial first degree burns are excluded (Haglund & Phillips, 2023, p. 918).
Half of the 24 hour volume is given in the first 8 hours and the remaining half over the next 16 hours, both timed from the moment of injury, not from arrival (Haglund & Phillips, 2023, p. 920). Colloid is withheld for the first 24 hours. The formula is only a starting point and is titrated to a urine output of 0.5 to 1.0 mL/kg/hr in adults and 1.0 to 2.0 mL/kg/hr in children under 30 kg (Haglund & Phillips, 2023, pp. 920-921).
Haglund, V. L., & Phillips, J. (2023). Anesthesia for burn patients. In Elisha, Heiner, & Nagelhout (Eds.), Nurse anesthesia (7th ed., pp. 917-929). Elsevier.