• 1 February 1975
    • journal article
    • Vol. 56 (1), 83-91
Abstract
The treatment of thermal oedema with coumarin (a benzopyrone) has been found to be most effect when fast moving air of 20 degrees was blown over the burnt animals. Coumarin has two main effects: one is to cause vascular injury thus allowing extra protein and fluid into the tissues; the other is to stimulate phagocytosis, enzyme production and thus proteolysis and a subsequent removal of protein and fluid from the injured tissues. At lower temperatures the injurious nature of coumarin is prominent. At medium range temperatures the proteolytic actions of coumarin outweigh its injurious nature. Resolution thus proceeds much more rapidly. At high temperatures resolution is slowed. This is a consequence of the antioxidant effect of coumarin on adrenaline and ambient temperature on peripheral dilatation. The results obtained tie in well with those obtained by workers using water of equivalent temperature.