Burn size increases risk
New research published by The Lancet shows that children with burn injuries are much more likely to suffer severe complications or die when the burns cover 60% or more of their total body surface area (TBSA). The article, by Dr. Marc Jeschke (medical director of our Ross Tilley Burn Centre) and colleagues, recommends that all children with this level of injury should be transferred immediately to specialist burns units and treated with increased vigilance and improved therapies.
Previous research in the 1990s suggested that a critical threshold of burns covering 40% or more TBSA resulted in increased risk of complications and death. However, during the past 10 years, additional improvements in care have further reduced morbidity and improved survival rates and outcomes after extensive burn injuries. Novel drug treatments, new grafting techniques and materials, and life-support systems combined with improved sensitivity of monitoring methods have all led to improved care after severe burn injuries.
The authors were able to demonstrate that the presence and/or concentration of a wide variety of established and novel biomarkers for organ function, metabolism, and inflammation differs widely depending on whether children have burn size above or below this critical threshold. Vital signs such as liver and kidney function were monitored to help come to these conclusions.
“While Sunnybrook does not treat children, the research we conducted in Galveston does have some applicability to adult burn patients,” says Dr. Jeschke. “The study shows that modern burn care has dramatically improved burn outcomes for all patients,” he adds.