• Pediatric emergency care · May 2004

    Case Reports Comparative Study

    Into hot water head first: distribution of intentional and unintentional immersion burns.

    • Sonya Daria, Naomi F Sugar, Kenneth W Feldman, Stephen C Boos, Scott A Benton, and Amy Ornstein.
    • Department of Pediatrics, General Pediatric Division, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA, USA.
    • Pediatr Emerg Care. 2004 May 1;20(5):302-10.

    IntroductionExperience with several, previously unreported, intentional face-first immersion burns led us to evaluate the distribution of inflicted and unintentional immersion scald burns in a hospital series.Setting(1) Authors' clinical and legal practices; (2) Burn center at regional Level 1 trauma hospital.Subjects: (1) Case series of face-first, inflicted immersion burn victims; (2) Consecutive hospitalized scald burn victims younger than 5 years old, 1/3/1996 to 3/25/2000.Methods(1) Individual case reports; (2) Retrospective records review. Simple descriptive statistics, Fisher Exact test and t test.Results(1) Six cases of inflicted head and neck immersion injury are described. Four were tap water and 2 food/drink scalds. (2) 22/195 hospitalized victims had sustained immersion burns, 13 from tap water and 9 from other fluids. Six (46%) tap water immersions and no (0%) other immersions had inflicted injuries (P = 0.05). Two of the tap water immersions and one other source immersion included burning of the head and neck. Of these, one tap water immersion, but no other immersion, was inflicted. In no patients were head and neck injuries the sole or predominant site of scalding. In all, 9 children sustained inflicted scalds. Bilateral lower extremity tap water immersion scalds occurred in 100% (6/6) of abusive and 29% (2/7) of unintentional injuries (P = 0.02). Buttock and perineal injuries occurred in 67% (4/6) inflicted versus 29% (2/7) unintentional tap water immersion scalds (P = 0.28). Other fluids caused bilateral lower extremity immersion burns in 3/9 (33 %) unintentionally injured patients, but no abused children (NS).ConclusionsCraniofacial immersion injury, although seen by the authors in legal cases, is infrequent. It was present incidentally in one inflicted tap water burn in the consecutive hospital series. This series affirms the predominance of bilateral lower extremity burns in inflicted tap water immersions. Buttock/perineal immersions were more common with abuse than with unintentional injury.

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