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Journal Article

Citation

Ghanimé G, Rizkallah N, Said JM. Ann. Burns Fire Disasters 2013; 26(2): 59-62.

Affiliation

Division of Plastic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Lebanese University ; Lebanese Hospital, Beirut, Lebanon.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Mediterranean Council for Burns and Fire Disasters)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24133397

PMCID

PMC3793879

Abstract

Burn care is one of the few areas in medicine considered both medically and surgically challenging, with burn injuries affecting people of all ages and both sexes. Between May 1992 and March 2012, 1,524 patients were admitted to the Lebanese Burn Center in Geitawi, with an average length of stay (LOS) of 36.5 days. The most frequently encountered injuries were thermal burns, generally resulting from domestic accidents. Of our patients, 47% were from rural areas and burned body surface (BBS) was the most serious factor, with 36% of all those admitted having suffered burns of 20% to 40% of their total body surface area (TBSA). Our team of experienced physicians, nurses, nutritionists and physical therapists was essential to successful burn care and outcomes were improved with adequate early fluid intake. The main causes of death were multiple organ failure due to hemodynamic instability, followed by respiratory failure from inhalation injury. A week after the injury, risk of infection was the main threat to the burn victims. Although this threat was compounded by malnutrition and immunodeficiency, excessive use of antibiotics was not justified. The fatality rate was about 18% and correlates with higher TBSA burns.


Language: en

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