Donate SIGN UP

Burns.

Avatar Image
ummmm | 15:58 Tue 04th Aug 2009 | Body & Soul
36 Answers
I burnt my arm on Sunday. I ran it under cold water and had frozen peas on it for about 2 hours. I had to because of the pain :-(

I thought it was going to be ok but today it's starting to blister. Is there anything that can be put on it?

The burns about the size of my palm.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 36rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by ummmm. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
I swear by Tea Tree Oil. Dries burns up a treat, minimal scarring.
Question Author
Thanks.....I'll give that a go. Looks like this one gonna leave a pretty big scar :-(
ummmm...sounds nasty.

Don't put ANYTHING on it.

Take ibuprofen for the pain and report back to AB tomorrow.
Question Author
It doesn't hurt so much now sqad except if anything touches it. So I can't wear jumpers at the moment.

This is not the first time I've had a bad burn from a kettle. I once tipped a whole kettle of boiling water down me. Now that was nasty....!!!

I'll will let you know tomorrow and will try hard not to moan too much :-( It's just that I have the lappy on the arm of the sofa and I keep rubbing it by accident.
Hi Ummmm
NEVER NEVER put anything on a burn. The only people qualified to treat burns by an application of whatever are medical professionals. As a retired Fireman, even we weren't allowed to teat burns apart from plenty of water to remove the heat. If it doesn't get any better, seek professional help.
Good luck
FBG40
Question Author
Thanks fbg40.
if the burn is bigger than a 50p you should go to A and E to get treatment use no creams run under cold water for 10 mins ( it will so cold it will hurt ) but this takes the inner heat from the burn.cover with a dry loose gauze not anything with fluff hope this helps
-- answer removed --
Question Author
That's a bit dramatic moomoo. I burnt my arm on a kettle, actually the steam, why waste A&E's time with something that in grand scheme of things is farely minor.

I only asked if there was something I could put on it to stop it blistering. Which it's starting to do..

Gosh.....some people eh?
the blistering is part of the bodys normal healing process
-- answer removed --
Question Author
I can't open the link.
-- answer removed --
Blister is usually good, because it's the body's way of protecting the damage whilst it heals. However if, as Spindle says, it's much bigger than a 50p coin (which you said it is), then you should get it looked at PDQ.

Definitely don't put anything on it. You run a very real risk of either cooking or infecting it if you do, and if you do go to A&E, they'll probably have to clean off whatever it is before they can treat it.

You could phone NHS direct. You'll be able to speak to a professional (usually a nurse) who will tell you whether you should go to A&E. Honestly, the A&E staff won't mind you going.
Get some Acriflex on it - fantastic stuff
Question Author
It's still very hot to the touch....but honestly, I really don't think it's bad enough to go to A&E.

Thanks anyway peeps xx
ummmm....How is your arm today?
Our GP surgery has a minor injuries clinic in the mornings, led by nurses, you could try that. The best thing I ever had for a burn was Flamazine but you can't get it over the counter.

Do you mean a burn or a scold ummmm?
If you are serious that it is still hot and as large as you describe I would go to A&E.
"teat burns" ? (fbg40's comment)
Ouch :-(

1 to 20 of 36rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Burns.

Answer Question >>