Associations of Diabetes and Hyperglycaemia with Extent and Outcomes of Acute Burn Injuries
Jeffrey Chandra, Edward Raby, Fiona M. Wood, P. Gerry Fegan, Bu B. Yeap

TL;DR
This study explores how diabetes and high blood sugar after burns affect recovery, finding that burn severity and diabetes history are linked to longer hospital stays.
Contribution
The study identifies associations between diabetes, stress-induced hyperglycaemia, and outcomes in acute burn patients, highlighting the impact on hospital length of stay.
Findings
Patients with diabetes had higher blood glucose levels and more hyperglycaemic episodes despite smaller burns.
Stress hyperglycaemia in non-diabetic patients with major burns was linked to longer hospital stays.
Burn extent and glucose monitoring practices were associated with prolonged inpatient stays.
Abstract
Background: Severe burns may induce hyperglycaemia in the absence of diabetes, but how glucose trajectories relate to burns outcomes is unclear. Aim: To assess incidence of hyperglycaemia following acute burn injury, and associations with diabetes history and length of stay (LOS). Methods: Retrospective cohort study of adults admitted with acute burns to tertiary centres. Blood glucose level (BGL), hyperglycaemic episodes (BGL ≥ 11.1 mmol/L) and hyperglycaemic days were recorded. Stress hyperglycaemia was defined as BGL ≥ 11.1 mmol/L without a diabetes history. Results: A total of 30 participants had a diabetes history and 260 did not. Participants with known diabetes had higher mean BGLs (9.7 vs. 9.0 mmol/L, p < 0.001), more hyperglycaemic episodes (28.0 vs. 17.2%, p < 0.001) and hyperglycaemic days (51 vs. 21%, p < 0.001), compared to those without diabetes, despite smaller burns…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBurn Injury Management and Outcomes · Wound Healing and Treatments · Injury Epidemiology and Prevention
