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Journal Article

Citation

Papaevangelou J, Batchelor JS, Roberts AH. Burns 1995; 21(1): 36-38.

Affiliation

Nuffield Burn Unit, Stroke Mandeville Hospital, Aylesbury, UK.

Comment In:

Burns 1996;22(6):504.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7718117

Abstract

Motor vehicles are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Burn injuries sustained from motor vehicles form a small but important subgroup. The authors have reviewed the case notes of 107 patients with motor vehicle-related burns over a 13-year period. The age ranged from 18 months to 65 years and the male to female ratio was 4:1. The mechanisms of injury were variable, although four major categories could be identified. These accounted for 83 per cent of the cases. Car fires following road traffic accidents was the largest group accounting for 48.5 per cent of cases. The remaining three groups were: motorcycle-related burns following road traffic accidents (6.5 per cent of cases), garage fire-related burns (15 per cent of cases) and car radiator-related burns (13 per cent of cases). Garage fire-related burns had the highest mortality of the four groups (25 per cent). This study demonstrated that garage fire burns are an important subgroup of motor vehicle-related burns.


Language: en

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