Epidemiologic comparative burn analysis in LUHS Hospital Kaunas Clinics during 2003–2005 vs. 2013–2015
Original research work
Augustina Grigaitė
Domantas Rainys
Loreta Pilipaitytė
Rytis Rimdeika
Published 2017-11-21
https://doi.org/10.15388/LietChirur.2017.11014
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Keywords

burns
trauma
epidemiology

How to Cite

1.
Grigaitė A, Rainys D, Pilipaitytė L, Rimdeika R. Epidemiologic comparative burn analysis in LUHS Hospital Kaunas Clinics during 2003–2005 vs. 2013–2015. LS [Internet]. 2017 Nov. 21 [cited 2024 Apr. 25];16(3-4):168-75. Available from: https://www.journals.vu.lt/lietuvos-chirurgija/article/view/11014

Abstract

Background and objectives
Burns are one of the most severe traumas, which traumatism has been changing over the past decades, globally and nationally. In LUHS hospital Kaunas Clinics, a study which analyses latest tendencies in burn epidemiology has not been conducted. Since 1972 LUHS Hospital Burns Center has been a national severe burns treatment center, thus our study data well represents national burns statistics. Our study aim was to analyze and compare data about burned patients who were admitted to Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Burns Department in LUHS Hospital Kaunas Clinics during two periods: 2003–2005 and 2013–2015.
Methods
This was a retrospective study. Patients from two comparison groups: treated in 2003–2005 and during 2013–2015 were divided according to age, gender, burn etiology, depth, degree, localization, hospitalization stay, surgery time (early surgery <7 days post burn/ delayed surgery >7 days post-burn). Overall data from 757 burn patients admitted during both periods were collected and analyzed.
Results
Statistically significantly more men suffered from burn injuries during the both periods (66.3% men, 33,7 % women). A statistically significant correlation between burn mechanism and gender was found: men are more likely to be burned by flame, women by scald. The most common burn localizations were arm, legs and head/neck/face regions. During the second period statistically significantly less arm, stomach/waist and leg region burns occurred. Flame was the most common burn cause in both periods. Hospital stay during the second period was statistically significantly shorter (26 days vs. 24 days). Deep burn number statistically significantly decreased from 79.5% to 49.3%. When comparing burn surgery tactics more early burn necrectomies (135 vs. 165) were performed sooner after the trauma (10 vs. 8 days) in 2013–2015.
Conclusions
Our study results match worldwide burns epidemiologic and treatment tendencies: less deep burns occur (79.5% during first period, 49.3% during the second period, p<0.05), hospital stay is getting shorter (26 days during first period and 24 days during the second, p<0.05). During 2013–2015, more early burn surgeries were performed (135 surgeries during first period vs. 165 during the second, p<0.05), which matches the worldwide burns treatment guideline. Epidemiological data from our study could help understand changes in burn injuries and to improve burn prevention strategies.

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