• Burns · Feb 2017

    Long-term survival after burns in a Swedish population.

    • Laura Pompermaier, Ingrid Steinvall, Mats Fredrikson, Johan Thorfinn, and Folke Sjöberg.
    • The Burn Centre, Department of Hand and Plastic Surgery, Linköping University, Region of Östergötland, Linköping, Sweden. Electronic address: laura.pompermaier@regionostergotland.se.
    • Burns. 2017 Feb 1; 43 (1): 157-161.

    IntroductionAs widely reported, the progress in burn care during recent decades has reduced the hospital mortality. The effect of the burns on long-term outcome has not received so much attention, and more study is indicated. The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate the long-time survival among patients who had been treated for burns.MethodsWe studied 1487 patients who were discharged alive from the Linköping University Hospital Burn Centre during the period 1993 until the end of December 2012. We used Cox's regression analysis to study the effect of burns on long-term survival after adjustment for different factors.ResultsAge and a full-thickness burn were significantly associated with mortality after discharge (p<0.001), whereas percentage of total body surface area burned (TBSA %), need for mechanical ventilation, and gender were not. Less than 1% of the patients with burns (13/1487) died within 30 days of discharge and a total of 176/1487 (12%) died during follow-up.ConclusionAge and full-thickness burns reduce the long-time survival after discharge from the Burn Centre, whereas the effect of TBSA% and need for artificial ventilation ends with discharge.Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.

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