Electrical burns are a severe form of thermal injury extending deep into tissue. Here, we investigated the effect of electrical burns on metabolic rate, body composition, and aerobic capacity. We prospectively studied a cohort of 24 severely burned children. Twelve patients had a combination of electrical and flame burns and 12 matched controls had only flame burns. Endpoints were cardiopulmonary fitness (maximal oxygen consumption [VO2]), muscle strength (peak torque per body weight), body mass index, lean body mass index, and days of myoglobinemia (≥500 mg/dl). Demographics of both the groups were comparable. The electrical burn group had more days of myoglobinemia during acute hospitalization than the flame burn group (3.6 ± 1.8 days vs 0.3 ± 0.5 days, P
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Foncerrada, G., Capek, K. D., Wurzer, P., Herndon, D. N., Mlcak, R. P., Porter, C., & Suman, O. E. (2017). Functional exercise capacity in children with Electrical burns. In Journal of Burn Care and Research (Vol. 38, pp. e647–e652). Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. https://doi.org/10.1097/BCR.0000000000000443
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