The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 2005
Case ReportsSuccessful management of adult smoke inhalation with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.
Pulmonary complications remain one of the leading causes of mortality in patients with burns. We report two cases of adult patients with thermal and inhalation injuries who were placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) and survived. Patient 1 was a 42-year-old male who suffered 15% TBSA and a severe inhalation injury requiring intubation upon arrival to the emergency department. ⋯ She was decannulated 288 hours later. Both patients were discharged home shortly afterwards and have managed well. ECMO should be considered when patients are facing a respiratory death from inhalation injury on conventional mechanical ventilation.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 2005
Self-inflicted burns in Athens, Greece: a six-year retrospective study.
Self-inflicted burns represent a major social and medical problem. The aim of this study was to record the epidemiology, mortality and etiology of suicide attempts by burning, in Athens, Greece. Over a 6-year period from April 1997 to April 2003, all the medical charts of the patients who were admitted to the Burn Center of the General State Hospital of Athens, Greece, with self-inflicted burns were retrospectively studied. ⋯ A preexisting psychiatric disorder was present in 43.3% of the patients. In conclusion, the extent and the depth of the burn injuries could explain the high mortality rate seen in these patients, in correlation with their negativism to the treatment. Burn care professionals should be familiar with self-inflicted burn patients who constitute a considerable proportion of major burns and require constant psychiatric support in addition to burn care.
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A retrospective multifactorial epidemiological study of 742 patients admitted to Erciyes University Medical Faculty Burn Unit during a 7-year period between 1996 and 2002 is presented. The overall male-to-female ratio was 1.88:1. The highest-risk age group of burn injuries was 0 to 6 years (48.6%), with the greatest number of injuries occurring to children who were 2 to 3 years of age. ⋯ Flame burns were the most frequent cause of burns in adults and the second-leading cause in children. Seventy-eight of the 742 patients died, with a mortality rate of 7.8 % in children and 12.6% and 19.23% in adult males and females, respectively. The overall mortality rate was 10.5%.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 2005
Therapeutic efficacy of three silver dressings in an infected animal model.
The organic salt AgNO3 has been available as a topical armamentarium to the medical arena for centuries and for burns for the past 60 years. Thirty-five (1968) years later, Charles Fox introduced and popularized a new topical agent known as silver sulfadiazine. More recently, several new slow-release silver dressings came to the forefront. ⋯ Although counts for Silvasorb (M) appear significantly lower than the controls for S. aureus, the numbers were not sufficient to be significant. However, Silverlon did achieve a slight significance. These preliminary data suggest that weekly dressing changes with these new silver dressings are feasible and economically and medically congruous.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 2005
Biography Historical ArticleBurns down under: lessons lost, lessons learned.