Annals of plastic surgery
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A total of 246 consecutive burn patients younger than 2 years and older than 70 years of age admitted to a burn center were reviewed retrospectively to study morbidity and mortality specific to these two age groups. Of these patients, 165 were less than 2 years of age and 81 were over 70 years of age, representing 16% and 8% of the total patient population respectively. In patients under 2, scald burns occurred in 127 (77%) and flame burns in 18 (11%). ⋯ A total of 36 complications occurred in the younger age group (0.2 complications per patient) and 111 in the older age group (1.4 per patient). Burn wound sepsis was the most common complication in each group, occurring in 28 patients under 2 and 42 elderly patients, and was responsible for the 1 death in the younger age group. Although burn wound sepsis was the most common complication in those patients over 70, cardiovascular and pulmonary complications were the most deadly, accounting for 68% (28 patients) of total deaths in this group.
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Annals of plastic surgery · Jul 1986
Successful treatment of acute head and neck dog bite wounds without antibiotics.
Dog bites continue to be the most common bite injury in the United States. We previously reported a series of 61 patients with 215 dog bite wounds. Of these, 55 patients had 188 dog bite wounds of the head and neck area which were treated with copious saline pressure irrigation, meticulous wound and wound edge debridement, repeated copious saline pressure irrigation, adequate antibiotic coverage, wound closure, and close postoperative monitoring. ⋯ Our present study uses the same protocol with the exclusion of antibiotic coverage. Our series of 49 patients with 145 head and neck wounds reveals a wound infection rate of 1.4% and a patient infection rate of 4%. This is not statistically significantly different from the outcome of the previous study.