• Burns · Jun 1998

    Comparative Study

    Death in the burn unit: sterile multiple organ failure.

    • R L Sheridan, C M Ryan, L M Yin, J Hurley, and R G Tompkins.
    • Department of Surgery, Shriners Burns Institute, Boston, MA 02114, USA. sheridan@helix.mgh.harvard.edu
    • Burns. 1998 Jun 1; 24 (4): 307-11.

    AbstractIt has been our impression over the years that the most common cause of death in our burn patients is multiple organ failure, despite the clinical absence of uncontrolled infection at the time of death. A six year review of all deaths in our unit confirmed this impression, revealing that multiorgan failure is indeed the most common cause of death (48 patients, 67 per cent), followed rather distantly by early withdrawal of support (15 patients, 21 per cent), resuscitation failure (4 patients, 6 per cent) and isolated pulmonary failure (4 patients, 6 per cent). Finally, we found that our patients dying of multiorgan failure, although often having had multiple small infections during their course, were indeed clinically uninfected at the time of death. These findings are consistent with the supposition that uncontrolled systemic inflammation, initially triggered by tissue injury and isolated infection, persists despite control of these infections and leads to multiple organ failure and death.

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