Department of Surgery, University of North Carolina, United States.
Burns. 2013 Dec;39(8):1619-25. doi: 10.1016/j.burns.2013.04.013. Epub 2013 Jun 13.
Burns are among the most devastating of all injuries and a major global public health crisis, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. In developed countries, aggressive management of burns continues to lower overall mortality and increase lethal total body surface area (TBSA) at which 50% of patients die (LA50). However, lack of resources and inadequate infrastructure significantly impede such improvements in developing countries.
This study is a retrospective analysis of patients admitted to the burn center at Kamuzu Central Hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi between June 2011 and December 2012. We collected information including patient age, gender, date of admission, mechanism of injury, time to presentation to hospital, total body surface area (TBSA) burn, comorbidities, date and type of operative procedures, date of discharge, length of hospital stay, and survival. We then performed bivariate analysis and logistic regression to identify characteristics associated with increased mortality.
A total of 454 patients were admitted during the study period with a median age of 4 years (range 0.5 months to 79 years). Of these patients, 53% were male. The overall mean TBSA was 18.5%, and average TBSA increased with age--17% for 0-18 year olds, 24% for 19-60 year olds, and 41% for patients over 60 years old. Scald and flame burns were the commonest mechanisms, 52% and 41% respectively, and flame burns were associated with higher mortality. Overall survival in this population was 82%; however survival reduced with increasing age categories (84% in patients 0-18 years old, 79% in patients 19-60 years old, and 36% in patients older than 60 years). TBSA remained the strongest predictor of mortality after adjusting for age and mechanism of burn. The LA50 for this population was 39% TBSA.
Our data reiterate that burn in Malawi is largely a pediatric disease and that the high burn mortality and relatively low LA50 have modestly improved over the past two decades. The lack of financial resources, health care personnel, and necessary infrastructure will continue to pose a significant challenge in this developing nation. Efforts to increase burn education and prevention in addition to improvement of burn care delivery are imperative.
烧伤是最具破坏性的伤害之一,也是一个重大的全球公共卫生危机,特别是在撒哈拉以南非洲地区。在发达国家,对烧伤的积极治疗继续降低整体死亡率,并增加致命的总体表面积(TBSA),50%的患者在此面积下死亡(LA50)。然而,资源匮乏和基础设施不足严重阻碍了发展中国家的这种改善。
本研究是对 2011 年 6 月至 2012 年 12 月期间在马拉维利隆圭的卡姆祖中央医院烧伤中心住院的患者进行的回顾性分析。我们收集了包括患者年龄、性别、入院日期、损伤机制、到医院就诊时间、TBSA 烧伤面积、合并症、手术日期和类型、出院日期、住院时间和生存情况等信息。然后我们进行了双变量分析和逻辑回归,以确定与死亡率增加相关的特征。
在研究期间,共有 454 名患者入院,中位年龄为 4 岁(0.5 个月至 79 岁)。这些患者中,53%为男性。总体平均 TBSA 为 18.5%,平均 TBSA 随年龄增长而增加——0-18 岁患者为 17%,19-60 岁患者为 24%,60 岁以上患者为 41%。烫伤和火焰烧伤是最常见的机制,分别占 52%和 41%,火焰烧伤与更高的死亡率相关。该人群的总体生存率为 82%;然而,随着年龄类别增加,生存率降低(0-18 岁患者为 84%,19-60 岁患者为 79%,60 岁以上患者为 36%)。在调整年龄和烧伤机制后,TBSA 仍然是死亡率的最强预测因素。该人群的 LA50 为 39% TBSA。
我们的数据再次表明,在马拉维,烧伤主要是儿科疾病,过去二十年来,高烧伤死亡率和相对较低的 LA50 略有改善。缺乏财政资源、医疗保健人员和必要的基础设施将继续对这个发展中国家构成重大挑战。除了改善烧伤护理服务外,增加烧伤教育和预防的努力是至关重要的。