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Journal Article

Citation

Gurbuz K, Demir M. J. Burn Care Res. 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, American Burn Association, Publisher Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1093/jbcr/iraa206

PMID

33301559

Abstract

The current descriptive analysis was designed to document the common epidemiologic characteristics and outcomes of burn injuries, and age-specific mortality patterns covering all age groups admitted for treatment to the Burn Center of Adana City Training and Research Hospital (ACTRH). Medical records were retrospectively analyzed. The patients were stratified into two age groups as pediatric and adults, and then into ten sub-age groups. Among the 946 patients of the study population, there were 24 mortalities with a mortality rate of 2.5%. Patients within the age range of 70-79 years had the highest mortality rate of 33.3%; followed by 60-69, 80+, 18-29, 10-17, and <5 sub-age groups, whose mortality rates were, 13.0%, 7.8%, 7.2%, 2.4%, 0.5%, respectively. In terms of multivariate regression analysis of factors predicting mortality among burn patients in all age groups, fire-flame related burns, age ≥18 years, total body surface area burned ≥20 percent (TBSA ≥20%), the existence of inhalation injury, deep partially/full-thickness burns were found to be significant prognostic factors of mortality. The strongest association was seen in TBSA ≥60% segment (p<0.0001), which had 25.9 times more death risk. As expected, a similar trend was detected when the age groups stratified into age groups, and the strongest association was in the 60+ sub-age group (p<0.0001), whose had 5.84 times more likely death; followed by 29-59, 18-29 sub-age groups, with the ORs of 2.12 (95%CI=1.25-3.61), 2.08 (95%CI=1.90-4.05), respectively. Oppose to these findings; the 0-17 sub-age group was not found to have a statistically significant effect in predicting mortality.


Language: en

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