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1.
From 1 January 1979 to 31 December 1993, 1109 patients were admitted to our burn unit located at Hacettepe University. Of the patients, 638 (57.5 per cent) were children (under the age of 16 years). The male to female ratio was 1.4: 1 in children, and was approximately 2.6: 1 for patients over 16 years of age. Of the 638 paediatric patients, 67 (10.5 per cent) sustained electrical burns. The causes of injury in the remaining 571 cases (89.5 per cent) were hot liquids in 379 (66.4 per cent of the non-electrical burns), flame in 190 (33.3 per cent) and contact burns in two (0.3 per cent). Of the scalds, 296 (78.1 per cent of the scalds), 52 (13.7 per cent), 22 (5.8 per cent) and nine (2.4 per cent) were caused by hot water, milk, meal and oil respectively. Of the flame burns, 21 (11.1 per cent) were due to LPG explosions.

Of the 471 adult patients (over 16 years), 159 (33.8 per cent) were injured by electricity. The causes of non-electrical burn injuries were: hot liquid in 25, flame in 274, chemical agents in four, contact in four, and other causes in four. Although our centre is located in Central Anatolia, 41.8 per cent of all patients were referred from the other six regions of Turkey. Of the 1109 inpatients, 645 (58.2 per cent) were injured in Central Anatolia, 279 (25.2 per cent) in the Black Sea Region, 55 (5.0 per cent) in the Mediterranean Region, 18 (1.6 per cent) in the Marmara Region, 34 (3.1 per cent) in the Aegean Region, 52 (4.7 per cent) in Southeastern Anatolia and 26 (2.3 per cent) in Eastern Anatolia. Approximately two-thirds of the patients (419) required one or more surgical interventions, including debridement and grafting, as well as amputation. The most important early complications were acute renal failure (148 patients −13.3 per cent), sepsis (660 patients −59.5 per cent) and gastrointestinal haemorrhage (seven patients −0.6 per cent). The overall mortality rate was 34.4 per cent. The epidemiological pattern of the burns showed that emergency measures should be taken to prevent scalding accidents to children throughout the country, and for electrical burns in adults, particularly those living in the Black Sea Region. In establishing, implementing and directing prevention programmes, regional differences should be taken into consideration.  相似文献   


2.
A retrospective study has been made of the patients hospitalized in the Burn Centre of La Fe Hospital in Valencia (Spain) during 1989. Of the 1825 patients seen during this period, 146 (8 per cent) were admitted to hospital. The mean patient age was 31.42 years, 68.5 per cent of the patients were male; 34.1 per cent were children under the age of 15 years and 15 per cent were over 60 years old. Fire was the most common cause of burns (50 per cent), and produced the most extensive lesions. Electrical current and firm contact with hot surfaces caused deeper burns. Thermal lesions were most frequently produced within the domestic environment. Burns caused by fire affected mainly the head and neck, scalding tended to involve the trunk and electrical current caused injury to the limbs. Half the hospital admissions were discharged within 15 days. Most of the lesions requiring hospital admission occurred during the winter months.  相似文献   

3.
This is a retrospective study analysing 5264 patients treated in the burn centre at Gülhane Military Medical Academy from 1 January 1986 to 31 December 1995. Our burn centre is not only the firs, but one of the best established and supported in Turkey. Our present study has the largest patient group of other previously published studies from Turkey. Of the total patients studied, 4464 patients had minor burns and were treated on an outpatient basis and 800 patients had moderate to major burns. Although our centre is in a military area in Ankara, only 1047 (20 per cent) patients were military personnel and the military-related burn causes comprised only 6 per cent of the total. The remaining 4217 (80 per cent of the total patients) were civilians. Flame injuries were also more frequent in military patients than civilians. Minor burns were most common in the age group 0–10 years old (40 per cent) and moderate to major burns in the age group 21–30 years (54 per cent). Scalds were the main cause of paediatric burns. Male patients were dominant. The overall mortality among inpatients was 18.2 per cent and mean total body surface area (TBSA) was 57.6 per cent in patients who died. 134 patients demonstrated inhalation injury and 82 per cent of these patients died. The epidemiological pattern of our patients is similar to that in other studies from developed countries, although some ethnic causative factors could be found. Our study indicates that emergency measures should be taken to prevent flame injuries at military barracks and industrial workplaces and scalding accidents to children at home and throughout the country.  相似文献   

4.
We organised a prospective series to study, the epidemiology and causes of burns in the city of Bergen, Norway. We included 361 patients treated during one year at the casualty centre or at the burn centre at the hospital. Thirty-six per cent (n = 131) of the patients were less than 15 years old, and 9% (n = 33) were over 60. The incidence of burns was 17/10,000 inhabitants, 0.7 for patients who were admitted and 17 for outpatients. Burns were most common among male subjects aged 40 years or less, while women were more at risk in the older age groups. Almost half the injuries were caused by scalds, and 92 (26%) were from contact with hot surface. Scalds were more common among women than among men, while firework and flame burns were more common among men. Burns occurred at home in 227 patients (63%), at work in 58 (16%), and during leisure activities in 76 (21%). The mean surface area burned was 3.5% total body surface area (TBSA); patients who were admitted had a TBSA of 18% compared with 1.8% among those treated as outpatients.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies based on either single hospital data or sampling of specific groups of hospitalized burns victims in Taiwan have provided only minimal epidemiological information. The study is designed to provide additional data on the epidemiology of hospitalized burns patients in Taiwan. Data were obtained from the Burn Injury Information System (BIIS), which brings together information supplied by 34 contracted hospitals. The study time course spanned a 2-year period from July 1997 to June 1999. Patient characteristics (age, sex, education level, etc.), causes and severity of injuries, and medical care measures were explored. A total of 4741 patients were registered with BIIS over the study period. The majority of hospitalized patients (67%) were male. The age distribution of burns patients showed peaks occurring at the age groups of 0-5 and 35-44 years. Over the time course of a day, burn injuries occurred more frequently from 10:00 to 12:00 h and 16:00 to 18:00 h. Injuries suspected as the result of suicide, homicide or child abuse accounted for 4.8% of hospitalized cases. More than 48% of the burns occurred in the home. The leading type of burn injury was scalding, followed by naked flame, explosion, electrical burns, and chemical burns due to caustic or corrosive substances. The mean percent total body surface area (%TBSA) for adults was 19%, and for young children was 12%. The average length of hospital stay was 18 days. In conclusion, children under 5 years and adults between 35 and 44 years of age are two high-risk groups for burn injuries. Corresponding to meal preparation time, hot substances such as boiling water, hot soup, etc. are the most common agents responsible for scalds. Prevention programs for reducing the risk of burn injuries during cooking and eating are required, especially for parents with young children.  相似文献   

6.
Epidemiology and mortality among burn patients over age 60 years who were admitted to the Burn Centre of La Fé Hospital (Valencia, Spain) between 1 January 1988 and 1 January 1991 have been studied. A total of 443 patients (7.8 per cent of all presenting patients) were hospitalized during this 3-year period; of these, 69 (15.5 per cent) were over 60 years old. There were 40 females and 29 males (mean age, 72.2 years). Mean burn area was 21.6 per cent of total body surface, and the most commonly involved regions were the lower limbs (81 per cent). Fire flames were the most common cause of burns (65.2 per cent) and produced the most extensive lesions. Eight-five per cent of the accidents occurred at home, and winter was the season of highest incidence. Patient mortality was 33.3 per cent, the most common causes of which were hypovolaemic shock during the first 24 h and pneumonia in the later stages.  相似文献   

7.
During the 6 years from July 1984 to May 1990, 193 patients (30.2 per cent of all patients) were admitted to our regional adult burn centre, for treatment of work-related burn injuries. The median age of patients was 32.5 years (range 18-64 per cent), and 94 per cent were males. Fifty-nine per cent of the patients came from metropolitan Toronto, and 40 per cent from rural Ontario. Most of the patients (97.3 per cent) were referred to the burn centre within 24 h of their injury. The most common aetiology was electrical injury (29.5 per cent), followed by flame (24.4 per cent), contact (10.4 per cent), flash (9.8 per cent), tar and asphalt (9.3 per cent), scald (7.8 per cent), chemical (5.1 per cent), steam (4.7 per cent) and grease (1 per cent). Within the electrical burn group, about one-half were flash burns, one-quarter were clothing fire injuries, and one-quarter were contact injuries. These occupational burns tended to be extensive injuries. The median body surface area (BSA) was 16.5 per cent, with a median full thickness (FT) component of 5.0 per cent. The average length of stay was 20.0 days. Inhalation injury requiring intubation occurred in 14.8 per cent of patients. Sepsis--confirmed by positive blood cultures--developed in 14 per cent of the patients, at an average time of 8.8 days postburn. Staphylococcus aureus was the commonest organism isolated from blood cultures. Pneumonia occurred in 6.3 per cent of patients. A total of 207 surgical procedures was performed on 113 of the 193 patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
A prospective study of 394 burned children (in-patients) up to the age of 12 years old was carried out for the period from January 1984 to December 1986. They were categorized into three age groups, the infants and toddlers 0-2 years, early childhood 3-6 years and late childhood 7-12 years. In the first two groups scalding was the predominant cause of injury, while in late childhood there were many more flame burns. Ninety-five per cent of the accidents occurred at home and the majority happened in the presence of parents. The presence of parents was not a deterrent to the accident but ensured speedy transport to the hospital. In our review 3 per cent of patients sustained more than 50 per cent BSA burns, there were 12 deaths with a mortality rate of 3 per cent. An intense campaign to make parents aware of the risk factors and their avoidance is required to reduce the number of burn accidents.  相似文献   

9.
All patients hospitalized between May 1987 and June 1988 suffering from burns covering over 50 per cent of the body surface area were treated by topical application of a cream containing cerium nitrate (0.05 M) and silver sulphadiazine (0.03 M) (CN + SSD). Eleven patients were included in this series, with a mean age of 35 years (range 22-65), a mean total burn size of 78 per cent (range 50-96 per cent) and full skin thickness covering a mean of 48 per cent (range 10-91 per cent). Eight patients survived (73 per cent) (mean age 36 years; mean total burn surface 73 per cent; mean full skin thickness burn surface, 38 per cent). These results are far better than those obtained in our Unit where a survival rate of 34 per cent was obtained in a comparable series of patients treated before 1987. Sixty positive blood cultures were obtained, which included a large variety of organisms with a slight predominance of Staph. aureus, Candida albicans and Ps. aeruginosa. Wound cultures were positive in 72 per cent of swabs and showed a predominance of Ps. aeruginosa (59 per cent of all the strains isolated). Even if CN + SSD appears in this series not to be very efficient in preventing wound colonization and septic complications, it permitted a very high survival rate in the treated patients, taking into account the extreme severity of the injuries. This beneficial effect is probably the consequence of the protective action of the yellow-green eschar formed by CN + SSD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
AIM: The aim of this study was to describe information about burns that occur in children and adolescents in Turkey. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The subjects were 362 patients whom were younger than 18 years who were treated at 3 burn centers in 2 different regions of Turkey between 1997 and 2005. The data collected for each case were age, gender, place of residence, cause and extent of burn, body sites affected, environment in which the injury occurred, interval from injury to arrival at a burn center, hospitalization status (inpatient versus outpatient), surgical treatment, and mortality. RESULTS: The 362 patients comprised 35.5% of all 1021 burn victims admitted during the study period. There were 183 boys and 179 girls (ratio 1:0.98) and the mean total body surface area burned was 17.7+/-16.5%. The highest proportion of patients were in the 1-6 years age group. Non-bath (not immersed) hot water scalding (216 cases, 59.7%) was the leading burn cause. The most common environment in which burn injury occurred was the home. The trunk was the body site most frequently affected (62.7%). 241 (66.6%) subjects lived in urban environments and 121 (33.4%) lived in rural areas. 171 patients (47.2%) were taken directly to the burn units, whereas the others (52.8%) were referred from other medical centers. 124 (34.3%) subjects were treated as outpatients and 238 (65.7%) were hospitalized. The overall mortality rate was 8.6% (31 deaths). Of the 238 inpatients, 92 (38.7%) were treated with daily dressings only, 128 (53.8%) required debridement, and 75 (31.5%) needed both debridement and grafting. CONCLUSION: Every country needs a nationwide public education system that is aimed at preventing burns and ensuring that burn victims receive proper first aid and age-appropriate, specialized burn care.  相似文献   

11.
This survey analyses data from nine Chinese burn units with respect to age, causes, severity of burn injury, and survival or death of patients admitted to hospital during the past 10 years (from January 1980 to December 1989). Of 12,606 burned patients treated, 3391 were children (26.9 per cent) and over half the children (52.3 per cent) were up to 4 years old. Almost 60 per cent of the 12,606 patients treated were in the young adult group (15-44 years), and 86.9 per cent of 12,606 patients sustained thermal injuries mainly from fire flames followed by scald injuries (40.7 per cent). About 93 per cent of the patients had burns covering less than 50 per cent of the body surface area. The overall mortality rate was 1.24 per cent. The LD50 for the 12,112 patients less than 60 years old was a burned surface area exceeding 80 per cent of the total body surface area.  相似文献   

12.
From 1965 to 1975 the population of Copenhagen decreased from 700 000 to 560 000 inhabitants. Small children under 6 years still constitute 6 per cent of the population but the percentage of old people over 60 years increased from 21 to 29 per cent.As a result of a thorough study of the case records of all outpatients treated at each of the outpatient casualty wards in Copenhagen, the total number of burn injuries treated as outpatients in the area during 1974 and 1975 has been recorded and compared with the number treated during 1964 and 1965.In spite of a 75 per cent increase in the total number of all types of injuries treated, the number of burn injuries treated is unchanged, and the number of severe burn injuries has decreased considerably. Burn injuries sustained by small children now constitute only 16 per cent of all burns, compared to 23 per cent previously.The conclusion is drawn that the pursuant prophylaxis which was practised has been effective, and also that the public has become generally familiar with the use of cold water as the best first aid remedy for burns.  相似文献   

13.

Objective

To describe the epidemiology of paediatric burns in Lithuania, identify the trends of burn occurrence, the vulnerable population and aetiology.

Methods

This study was based on all inclusive national information obtained from the National Health Insurance database for the period of 2001–2010. Information on the burns aetiology was collected in the Hospital of Lithuanian University of Heath Sciences Kauno Klinikos.

Findings

7146 children in the age group of 0–14 were hospitalized in Lithuania and constituted 44% of all admissions due to burns. The incidence among boys was 149.8 and among girls 99.9 per 100,000. The highest risk of burns was observed from 11 to 15 months of age. Scalding in 0–1 years age group composed 96% of all burns in this age group.

Conclusion

Children younger than 2 years of age are a vulnerable population of burns in Lithuania. Scalding was main cause of their burns. The aetiological subgroups of scalding were scalding with hot drinks/food and scalding with hot water meant for household. The major part of scalding with hot drinks was due to scalding with parents’ drinks. Scalding with hot water meant for household is associated with the lack of hot water supply.  相似文献   

14.
In order to evaluate the epidemiology and functional results of hand burns in young children, 92 consecutive patients (126 hand burns) under age 5 years admitted to a Burn Center were reviewed. Scald burns (49 per cent) were most common, followed by flame (34 per cent), contact (14 per cent) and electrical burns (3 per cent). The child was left unattended by an adult in 53 per cent of cases and documented abuse was present in 6 per cent. The mean total body surface area (TBSA) burned was 17 per cent, and 77 patients (85 per cent) had additional burns in other areas (arms 34 per cent, legs 31 per cent, chest 29 per cent and face 27 per cent).

Palmar burns occurred in 24 hands (19 per cent), dorsal in 41 (33 per cent), while both surfaces were burned in 61 (48 per cent). Joints involved included the MP in 96 (76 per cent). PIP in 87 (69 per cent) and DIP in 80 (63 per cent). The depth was superficial partial thickness in 53 (47 per cent), deep partial in 55 (44 per cent), and full thickness in 18 hands (14 per cent); a total of 29 hands were grafted (15 deep partial and 14 full thickness). Escharotomies were required in 12 hands (9 per cent) (9 flame and 3 scald) and partial amputation of digits was required in 3 (2 per cent).

Follow-up was available in 46 hands from 7 to 120 months (mean 39 months). Partial thickness burns (34) healed with normal (32) or near-normal (2) hand function and developmental delay occurred in one patient. Hand function in 12 full thickness burns was normal in 9, decreased in 3 with developmental delay in 2 patients. The number of reoperations required per hand burned after hospital discharge varied with age (2 years and under 1.2 vs. over 2 years 0.6), depth (deep partial 0.4 vs. full thickness 1·6) and surface involved (palmar 1.3 vs. dorsal 0.1 vs. both 1.5), indicating that children under 2 years with full thickness palmar burns are at increased risk of developing burn scar deformities requiring surgical correction. Although 24 total reoperations were required in 25 deep partial and full thickness hand burns, residual burn scar deformities were present in only 2 hands at follow-up (1 boutonniere and I web space contacture).

It is concluded that the overall outcome of hand burns in this age-group is good and developmental delay is rare with proper acute management and prompt surgical correction of burn scar deformities.  相似文献   


15.
Three hundred and nineteen patients with different types of burns were studied at King Fahd Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia over a 2-year period (December, 1985 to December, 1987). Scalding was the most common cause (56.4 per cent) of burn injuries compared with 41.4 per cent of patients who sustained flame injury; 84.6 per cent of the thermal injuries occurred at home, with children (less than or equal to 18 years of age) being affected most frequently (61.8 per cent). The overall mortality was 9.4 per cent.  相似文献   

16.
Bessey PQ  Arons RR  Dimaggio CJ  Yurt RW 《Surgery》2006,140(4):705-15; discussion 715-7
BACKGROUND: Both children and older adults are thought to sustain burns serious enough to warrant hospitalization disproportionately more often than other age groups, but the incidence, injury characteristics, and outcome have not been precisely defined. METHODS: Patients hospitalized with a burn diagnosis were identified from hospital discharge data from California, Florida, New Jersey, and New York for the 5-year period 2000-2004. RESULTS: In those states, 60,024 residents were hospitalized with a diagnosis of burn and/or inhalation injury according to the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification diagnosis codes. Using population data from the United States Census 2000, we found that the average annual incidence of hospitalization with a burn diagnosis in these 4 states was 155 per million (per M) (95% confidence interval,153-158). There were 13,453 children under 15 years of age: incidence, 163 per M (range, 157-169). Of these 9508 (70%) were under 5 years of age: incidence, 363 per M (range, 347-379). In contrast, there were 10,686 patients 65 years of age or older: incidence, 214 per M (range, 205-224), of whom 2091 were at least 85 years old: incidence, 347 per M (range, 314-380). The incidence of hospitalization with a burn diagnosis for patients 15 to 64 years of age was 141 per M (range, 138-145). Compared with children younger than 15 years, patients aged 65 years and older more often had flame burns (odds ratio [OR], 2.12), burns of 20% or more of body surface area (OR, 2.41), inhalation injury (OR, 2.88), respiratory failure (OR, 4.48), and death (OR, 16.53), all P < .0001. CONCLUSIONS: Older individuals are the most vulnerable to the morbidity and mortality of burn injury. Prevention strategies targeted to those older than 65 years should be developed.  相似文献   

17.
This survey analyses data from 17 French burn units with respect to age, severity of injury and survival of patients admitted to hospital during 1985. Of the 2398 patients treated, more than half were between 15 and 50 years old. About 90 per cent of the patients had burns covering less than 50 per cent of the body surface area. The overall mortality rate was 11.8 per cent. The LD50 for the 2398 patients was a burned surface area of approximately 60 per cent of the total body surface area. The LD50 for patients less than 30 years old was a burn covering just over 80 per cent of the total body surface. The survival rate as a function of the Baux index was also analysed.  相似文献   

18.
The authors analysed a subset of data from the New England Regional Burn Program (NERBP) to describe the epidemiology of burn injuries for children aged from birth to 19 years in the six-state New England area of the USA. The subset of the NERBP data analysed pertained to residents of the six New England states who were admitted to hospital for the treatment of a burn injury sustained between 1 July 1978 and 30 June 1979. Analysis of the data revealed that 1128 (41 per cent) of the 2742 hospitalized burns identified occurred to persons between the ages of birth and 19 years, yielding an overall burn incidence rate of 30.7 burns per 100,000 person-years. Children aged from birth to 2 years sustained a higher burn rate, 96.7 burns per 100,000 child-years, than did children in any other age category. The burn rate for males was higher than the rate for females in each age category, as were the rates for black children compared to white children. Children in Massachusetts experienced the highest overall burn rate among the six New England states; the lowest rate occurred in New Hampshire. Overall, 63 per cent of the burns occurred in a residential setting. The most common activities related to burn injury were food preparation and food consumption, which accounted for 471 (42 per cent) of the burn injuries.  相似文献   

19.
From January 1979 to January 1987, 125 patients were treated in our Centre for various electrical injuries. Among them, 85 patients were over 15 years of age (89.4 per cent were males and 10.6 per cent females) and 40 patients were below 15 years of age (92.5 per cent were males and 7.5 per cent females). Electricians were the most frequently injured in the over 15-year-old age-group, whereas most patients under 15 years old were students. We focused our study on five patients with multiple and severe electrical injury. Two of these patients were injured while erecting TV aerials, two were injured at work and the other one was working on a house roof. Despite all our efforts extensive limb amputations were required. Following complete healing, we fitted prostheses to the amputation stumps. All the patients have now returned to society as capable individuals, two of them to their previous occupations and the other three with new occupations. Our experience with five patients showed that patients with severe electrical injury and multiple amputations have a reasonable chance of recovery. Rehabilitation therapy must be given as early as possible after the electrical injury so that the patients may return to their normal place in society.  相似文献   

20.
Pediatric burns are frequently observed: twenty-year burn analysis was performed in a single department, and 354 cases, aged 0-6 years old. The major cause of pediatric burns was scalding (68%) and hot water comprised over half of the scald burns. At 1 year old and younger, the total burn surface area (TBSA) was significantly smaller than from 1 to 6 years old (4.8+/-9.56 versus 10.5+/-18.86%, respectively, p<0.001). TBSA of scald burns was significantly greater than contact burns (8.9+/-15.76 versus 0.9+/-2.0%, respectively, p<0.05). Surgery was performed for 65 patients (18%) and 126 patients were hospitalized (34%). Compared to the first decade of analysis, the second decade had fewer patients (222 versus 142 cases) and lower severity (7.4+/-14.6% versus 6.6+/-13.26%, TBSA). Pediatric burns in younger children should be studied closely as to their causes and with further follow-up.  相似文献   

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