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Journal Article

Citation

Arnaout A, Khashaba H, Dobbs T, Dewi F, Pope-Jones S, Sack A, Estela C, Nguyen D. Burns 2017; 43(4): e1-e6.

Affiliation

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery (WCBP), Morriston Hospital, Swansea, SA6 6NL, UK. Electronic address: Dai.Nguyen@wales.nhs.uk.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.burns.2017.01.008

PMID

28412133

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Since the introduction of e-cigarettes to the UK market in 2007 their popularity amongst young adults has significantly increased. These lithium-ion powered devices remain unregulated by the Standards Agency and as a result burns centres across the world have seen an increasing number of patients presenting with significant burns, resulting from poor quality batteries that appear to be liable to explode when over-heated, over-charged or incorrectly stored.

METHODS: Retrospective and perspective review of all e-cigarette related burns presenting to the Southwest Burns Network; South Wales Burns Centre (Morriston Hospital) or to Bristol burns centre (Southmead Hospital) between Oct 15-July 16, followed by a review of available literature performed and eligible papers identified using PRISMA 2009 Checklist.

RESULTS: South Wales Burns Centre (Morriston Hospital) (N=5), Bristol burns centre (Southmead Hospital) (N=7). 92% of injuries were seen in male patients with a mean age of 34.58 (±12.7). The mean TSBA sustained 2.54% of mixed depth, most common anatomical area is the thigh 83% (n=10) with a mean 23.1(±5) days to heal with conservative management. The literature search yielded 3 case series (Colaianni et al., 2016; Kumetz et al., 2016; Nicoll et al., 2016) [8,9,12] and 4 case reports (Jablow and Sexton, 2015; Harrison and Hicklin, 2016; Walsh et al., 2016; Shastry and Langdorf, 2016) [6,7,10,11]. We compare our findings with the published studies.

CONCLUSION: The import and sale of e-cigarettes remains unrestricted. This increases the risk of devices being available in the UK market that do not meet the British Standard Specification, potentially increasing their risk of causing fire and exploding. Consumers should be made aware of this risk, and advised of adequate charging and storage procedures. In case lithium ion compounds leak following a breach in the battery, first aid with mineral oil use is advocated to avoid a further chemical reaction.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Burn; E-cigarette; Electronic cigarettes; Explosion; Lithium battery; Lithium-ion

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