Relationship between Burn Wound Location and Outcomes in Severely Burned Patients: More Than Meets the Size

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Abstract

We hypothesized that burn location plays an important role in wound healing, mortality, and other outcomes and conducted the following study to test this multifold hypothesis. We conducted a study to retrospectively look at patients with burns ≥10% TBSA. Demographics, TBSA, partial/full thickness burns (PT/FT) in various wound locations, fluids, inhalation injury, mortality, ICU duration, and hospital duration were considered. Initial wound healing rates (%/d) were also calculated as a slope from the time of the first mapping of open wound size to the time of the third mapping of open wound size. Multivariate logistic regression and operating curves were used to measure mortality prediction performance. All values were expressed as median [interquartile range]. The mortality rate for 318 patients was 17% (54/318). In general, patients were 43 years [29, 58 years] old and had a TBSA of 25% [17, 39%], PT of 16% [10, 25%], and FT of 4% [0, 15%]. Between patients who lived and did not, age, TBSA, FT, 24-hour fluid, and ICU duration were statistically different (P < 0.001); FT upper extremities (0% [0, 3%] vs 2% [0, 11%], P

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Liu, N. T., Rizzo, J. A., Shingleton, S. K., Fenrich, C. A., Serio-Melvin, M. L., Christy, R. J., & Salinas, J. (2019). Relationship between Burn Wound Location and Outcomes in Severely Burned Patients: More Than Meets the Size. Journal of Burn Care and Research, 40(5), 558–565. https://doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/irz098

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