Type of necrosis seen in case of burn:
First, I need to recall the different types of necrosis. There's coagulative, liquefactive, caseous, fat necrosis, and fibrinoid necrosis. Burn injuries typically involve high heat, which causes protein denaturation and coagulation. That's why coagulative necrosis is common in burns. But wait, sometimes people confuse this with liquefactive, which is more in the brain.
Wait, the question is about burns. So, high temperature leads to coagulation of proteins, making the tissue firm and dry. That's coagulative necrosis. Caseous is more in TB, liquefactive in brain infarcts. Fat necrosis is in pancreatitis. Fibrinoid is in vasculitis or hypertension. So the answer should be coagulative. But the options are missing. Let me check the correct answer given by the user. The correct answer is not listed here, but the user's correct answer is probably option C or D. Wait, the user's correct answer is written as ". " which is empty. Maybe there was a formatting error. Let me see if I can infer the options. Common options for necrosis types are A. Coagulative, B. Liquefactive, C. Caseous, D. Fat necrosis. So if the correct answer is coagulative, then the correct option is A. But the user's correct answer is missing. Oh, the user provided the correct answer as "C. Coagulative necrosis" but in the question options, they didn't list the options. Maybe the original question had options A to D with coagulative as one of them.
Wait, the user's correct answer line is empty. Let me recheck. The user's input says "Correct Answer: . " which is incomplete. So perhaps the original question had options but they were not included here. The user might have made a mistake in pasting the question. Since the user is asking for an explanation based on the correct answer, I need to infer the correct answer from the context. Since the question is about burn necrosis, the correct answer is coagulative necrosis. So the correct answer is likely option C or another, but since the options are missing, I'll proceed with the explanation for coagulative necrosis in burns.
Now, the core concept is the types of necrosis and their causes. The core concept is that burns cause coagulative necrosis due to protein denaturation. The correct answer explanation would detail how heat causes coagulation of proteins, leading to a firm, dry tissue appearance. The wrong options would be liquefactive (brain), caseous (TB), fat necrosis (pancreas). The clinical pearl is to remember that coagulative is in most ischemic injuries, except the brain which is liquefactive. The correct answer is coagulative necrosis, so if the options are A-D with coagulative as one, then that's the correct answer. Since the user's correct answer