
@article{ref1,
title="Thermal injury in pregnancy--the neglected tragedy",
journal="South African medical journal SAMJ",
year="1990",
author="Rode, H. and Millar, Alastair John Ward and Cywes, S. and Bloch, C. E. and Boes, E. G. and Theron, E. J. and Lodder, J. V. and Van der Merwe, A. Elbie and de Kock, M.",
volume="77",
number="7",
pages="346-348",
abstract="Thermal injury sustained during pregnancy presents special management problems for the gravid woman and her unborn child. Because of the reported high morbidity and mortality and lack of available data in South Africa, a multicentre retrospective review was undertaken by five burn centres. Thirty-three patients (average age 25,7 years) with mean 30% (range 1-80%) total body surface area burn were assessed. A review of the clinical material led to the following observations and conclusions. Pregnancy does not influence maternal outcome after thermal injury and maternal survival is usually accompanied by fetal survival in the absence of significant maternal complications. Maternal survival is less likely if the burn wound exceeds 50% total body surface area. Thermal injury does increase the risk of spontaneous abortion and premature labour, and fetal survival depends on fetal maturity. Early obstetric intervention is only indicated in the gravely ill patient where complications (hypoxia, hypotension, sepsis) jeopardize the life of a viable fetus. The mode of delivery should be determined by obstetric considerations.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0038-2469",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}