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Journal Article

Citation

Sarwar U, Nicolaou M, Khan MS, Tiernan E. Int. J. Prev. Med. 2011; 2(4): 291-293.

Affiliation

S1 Plastic Surgery, Salisbury District Hospital, Salisbury, England, United Kingdom.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

22174972

PMCID

PMC3237275

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We report a rare case of burns following the use of automated air-fresheners. METHODS: We present a case report with a brief overview of the literature relating to burns associated with air-fresheners. The mechanism and treatment of these types of injuries are also described. RESULTS: A 44 year-old female was admitted under the care of the burns team following burns secondary to an exploding air-freshener canister. The patient sustained burns to the face, thorax and arms resulting in a seven-day hospital admission. The burns were treated conservatively. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge this is one of the few documented cases of burns as a result of air-fresheners. As they become more ubiquitous, we anticipate the incidence of such cases to increase. As such, they pose a potential public health concern on a massive scale.


Language: en

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