• J Burn Care Res · Mar 2006

    Epidemiologic analysis of patients with burns presenting to the burn units of a University Hospital Network in Turkey.

    • Altug Kut, Ozgur Basaran, Turgut Noyan, I Serdar Arda, H Seval Akgün, and Mehmet Haberal.
    • Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Adana Teaching and Medical Research Center, Başkent University, Ankara, Turkey.
    • J Burn Care Res. 2006 Mar 1;27(2):161-9.

    AbstractThis retrospective study analyzed risk factors in addition to the demographic and epidemiological features of 813 burn patients who were admitted to the burn units of a University Hospital Network in Turkey during a 6-year period. The study consisted of 436 men (53.6%) and 377 women (46.4%; mean age, 31; range, 0-87 years). The age distribution of the patients peaked at 1 to 6 years and at 35 to 44 years. The most common types of burns were scalds (63.8%) and flame burns (22.1%). The mean TBSA burned was 9.4 +/- 15.3% in adults and 19.8 +/- 18.6% in children. The median and mean hospital stays were 16 and 22.8 days, respectively (range, 1-114 days). A total of 813 patients were evaluated, leaving only 255 hospitalized patients. Of the hospitalized patients, 100 (74.6%) underwent autografting, 8 (6.0%) underwent amputation, 113 (84.3%) underwent débridment, and 76 (56.7%) underwent escharotomy. The mortality rate among hospitalized patients was 14.1%. Although this study provides information about the population within close proximity to our burn units, there remains a need for a countrywide database of burn incidents.

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