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Journal Article

Citation

Ho WS, Ying SY, Chan HH, Chow CM. Burns 2001; 27(5): 471-474.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Prince of Wales Hospital, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong. hows@cuhk.edu.hk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11451600

Abstract

Assault by burning is a serious form of trauma that often results in higher incidence of inhalation injury, longer intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital stay, and higher mortality rate than is observed in the general burn population. We evaluated the epidemiology and outcome of assault burn victims treated in a tertiary burn center over a 6-year period. Among the 1063 acute burn patients who had been admitted to the Burns Unit between March 1993 and February 1999, 28 (2.6%) had assault burn injuries either by scald, chemical or fire. The mean extent of burn was 21.9%+/-20.8% (range 2-90%) total body surface area and the mean length of hospital stay was 65.2+/-107.3 days (range 1-565). Nineteen out of 25 patients (67.9%) underwent 76 operations. Nine patients had inhalation injuries requiring intubation and ICU admission. Three patients died in the series, which yielded a mortality rate of 10.7%. Compared to the general burn population, the assault burn group had significantly larger burn size (P<0.001), higher incidence of inhalation injury (P<0.001), longer ICU and hospital stay (P<0.001), and higher mortality rate (P<0.005). When these 28 victims were grouped according to the type of assault burn injury into a fire group, chemical group and scald group, all the 9 ICU admission and the 3 mortalities belonged to the fire group. Assault by fire resulted in larger burn size (P=0.03), more inhalation injury (P<0.001) and longer ICU stay (P=0.02). Although the fire group had a longer hospital stay and higher mortality rate, this was statistically insignificant.


Language: en

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