All of the following are complications of burns except
Now, looking at the options (though they're not provided here), I need to figure out which one isn't a typical complication. Let's think of possible distractors. For example, if an option mentions something like "osteoporosis," that's not a direct complication of burns. Or maybe "diabetes" isn't a complication, whereas something like "acute kidney injury" is. Wait, acute kidney injury can occur due to myoglobinuria from muscle damage in severe burns. So if an option lists a condition that doesn't fit into the typical burn complications, that's the answer.
Wait, the user mentioned that the correct answer is provided but the options are missing. The user probably expects me to generate a plausible question with options. Let me think of common burn complications. Common ones include: hypovolemic shock, infection, sepsis, acute tubular necrosis, respiratory failure, and systemic inflammatory response syndrome. If one of the options is something like "neurogenic shock," that's not a typical burn complication. Neurogenic shock is more associated with spinal injuries. Alternatively, "hyperkalemia" can occur due to cell damage, but maybe another option like "hypernatremia" isn't a direct complication.
Wait, maybe the options include something like "osteomyelitis" which is a possible complication from deep burns. Or perhaps "hypoglycemia" isn't a common complication. Wait, burn patients might have hypermetabolism leading to hyperglycemia. So if an option says "hypoglycemia," that's incorrect.
But since the user hasn't provided the options, I have to make an educated guess. Let's assume the correct answer is the one that's not a burn complication. For example, if the options are A. Hypovolemic shock, B. Sepsis, C. Acute renal failure, D. Neurogenic shock. Then D is the correct answer because neurogenic shock is not a burn complication. Alternatively, if the options include "osteoporosis," which is a late complication but not common, or maybe not considered a direct complication.
Wait, another angle: sometimes test questions include things like "pancreatitis" as a distractor. So if one of the options is pancreatitis, that's not a burn complication. But I need to be precise. Let me structure the explanation accordingly. The core concept is burn complications. The correct answer is the one that doesn't fit. The wrong options are common complications. The clinical pearl would be to remember the typical complications and eliminate the odd one out.
**Core Concept**
Burn complications arise from tissue damage, fluid loss, infection, and systemic inflammation. Key complications include hypovolemic shock, sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), and metabolic derangements like hyperkalemia. Differentiating these from unrelated conditions is critical for accurate diagnosis.
**Why the Correct Answer is Right**
Neurogenic