| Literature DB >> 27694999 |
Emily O'Halloran1, Amit Shah2, Lawrence Dembo2, Livia Hool3,4, Helena Viola3, Christine Grey2, James Boyd5, Tomas O'Neill1, Fiona Wood1,6, Janine Duke1, Mark Fear1.
Abstract
Severe burn injury significantly affects cardiovascular function for up to 3 years. However, whether this leads to long-term pathology is unknown. The impact of non-severe burn injury, which accounts for over 80% of admissions in developed countries, has not been investigated. Using a rodent model of non-severe burn injury with subsequent echocardiography we showed significantly increased left ventricular end systolic diameter (LVESD) and ventricular wall thickness at up to 3 months post-injury. Use of propranolol abrogated the changes in cardiac measures observed. Subsequently we investigated changes in a patient cohort with non-severe injury. Echocardiography measured at baseline and at 3 months post-injury showed increased LVESD at 3 months and significantly decreased posterior wall diameter. Finally, 32 years of Western Australian hospital records were used to investigate the incidence of cardiovascular disease admissions after burn injury. People who had experienced a burn had increased hospital admissions and length of stay for cardiovascular diseases when compared to a matched uninjured cohort. This study presents animal, patient and population data that strongly suggest non-severe burn injury has significant effects on cardiovascular function and long-term morbidity in some burn patients. Identification of patients at risk will promote better intervention and outcomes for burn patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27694999 PMCID: PMC5046146 DOI: 10.1038/srep34650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Impact of non-severe burn injury on cardiac function in mice and effect of propranolol administration.
Echocardiography was conducted on mice at baseline, 1 week, 4 weeks and 12 weeks post-injury using an i13L probe on a Vivid 7 Dimension cardiac ultrasound system with rodent software (GE Healthcare). Representative images of baseline (n = 16), 12 weeks post-injury untreated (n = 8) and 12 week post injury treated with propranolol (n = 8) respectively are shown (a–c). LVESD is significantly elevated at all time-points post-injury in the control group (d). Use of propranolol ameliorates this change (d). LVEDD (e) and Posterior wall thickness (f) are both transiently elevated in control group but not in propranolol treated group (e,f). IVS thickness is elevated up to 3 months post injury in control but only up to 28 days post-injury in propranolol treated group (g). No significant difference is observed in heart rate in either group (h). Fractional shortening is significantly decreased in control at 28 and 84 days post-injury (i). Black circles indicate control group. Grey triangles propranolol treated group. *Indicates significantly different (p < 0.05) when compared to baseline pre-injury values.
Summary of demographic details of 24 patients that completed both baseline and 3-month post-injury echocardiography including gender and TBSA of injury.
| Gender | TBSA | Age | BMI |
|---|---|---|---|
| F | 1.0 | 33 | 32 |
| F | 2.0 | 27 | 24.7 |
| M | 2.5 | 70 | 34.7 |
| M | 3.5 | 45 | 34 |
| M | 5.0 | 24 | 32.9 |
| F | 6.0 | 50 | 30.6 |
| M | 9.0 | 46 | 33.8 |
| M | 9.0 | 49 | 29.8 |
| M | 12.0 | 22 | 26.8 |
| M | 15.0 | 27 | 29 |
| M | 12.0 | 19 | 28 |
| M | 5.0 | 31 | 32.6 |
| M | 3.5 | 29 | 34 |
| M | 4.0 | 25 | 27 |
| M | 1.5 | 22 | 20.8 |
| M | 2.0 | 27 | 29 |
| M | 3.0 | 22 | 23 |
| M | 7.0 | 19 | 23 |
| M | 12.0 | 44 | 32 |
| M | 3.0 | 27 | 33.7 |
| M | 3.0 | 20 | 21 |
| M | 10.5 | 55 | 30 |
| M | 1.5 | 19 | 24.8 |
| M | 10.0 | 44 | 29.6 |
Figure 2Changes in cardiac parameters after non-severe burn injury in adult patients.
LVESD is significantly elevated at 3-months post-injury in the patient cohort (a,b). Posterior wall thickness is also significantly different at 3-months post injury but is reduced when compared to baseline (e,f). No other significant changes are observed in LVEDD (c,d), IVS thickness (g,h) or heart rate (i,j). Panels a, c, e, g, i show baseline measures (black circles) and 3-month post-injury measures (grey triangles) for LVESD, LVEDD, PW thickness, IVS thickness and heart rate for each patient. Panels b, d, f, h and j show the difference between 3-month and baseline measures (3-month value-baseline value) for LVESD, LVEDD, PW thickness, IVS thickness and heart rate respectively.
Baseline demographic and pre-existing health status factors for those aged 15 to 45 years at first burn injury hospitalisation and frequency matched non-injury cohort, Western Australia, 1980–2012.
| Characteristics | No Injury N (%) | Burn injury N (%) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 56,822 | 14,555 | ||
| Aboriginal | |||
| Yes | 767 (1.3) | 1,764 (12.1) | <0.001 |
| Social disadvantage quintiles | |||
| Quintile 1. (Most disadvantaged) | 5,977 (10.5) | 2,918 (20.5) | <0.001 |
| Quintile 2. | 12,729 (22.5) | 4,683 (32.9) | |
| Quintile 3. | 10,473 (18.5) | 3,089 (21.7) | |
| Quintile 4. | 10,454 (18.4) | 1,793 (12.6) | |
| Quintile 5. (Least disadvantaged) | 17,030 (30.1) | 1,748 (12.3) | |
| Remoteness | |||
| Major city | 42,989 (75.9) | 7,031 (49.2) | <0.001 |
| Inner regional | 4,700 (8.3) | 1,577 (11.0) | |
| Outer regional | 4,867 (8.6) | 2,407 (16.9) | |
| Remote | 2,491 (4.4) | 1,732 (12.1) | |
| Very remote | 1,614 (2.8) | 1,532(10.7) | |
| Any comorbidity (CCI>=1) | 729 (1.3) | 803 (5.5) | <0.001 |
| Prior admission for disease of | 829 (1.5) | 564 (3.9) | <0.001 |
| circulatory system | |||
*SEIFA socio-economic disadvantage quintiles; 2.2% missing values for burn and 0.3% for uninjured.
**ARIA+ remoteness classification; 1.9% missing values for burn and 0.3% for uninjured.
†Comorbidity based on derived Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) using 5-year look-back.
‡Principal diagnosis record of hospitalisation for circulatory disease (ICD9 390–459; ICD10 I00-I99, G45) using 5-year look-back period.
Classification (percentage) of post-burn discharge admissions for primary diagnosis diseases of the circulatory system for those aged 15 to 45 years hospitalised for burn injury.
| Classification of admissions for diseases of circulatory system | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|
| Acute rheumatic heart diseases | 0.2 |
| Chronic rheumatic heart diseases | 0.7 |
| Hypertensive diseases | 3.1 |
| Ischaemic heart diseases | 32.4 |
| Pulmonary heart disease & diseases of pulmonary circulation system | 1.5 |
| Heart failure | 8.6 |
| Other forms of heart disease | 13.9 |
| Cerebrovascular diseases | 5.7 |
| Diseases of arteries, arterioles and capillaries | 5.6 |
| Diseases veins, lymphatic vessels, lymph nodes not elsewhere classified | 26.5 |
| Other and unspecified disorders of the circulatory system | 1.8 |
| Total | 100% |
Figure 3Hospital admission rates for diseases of the circulatory system.
Unadjusted rates of hospital admissions (per 100 person years (PYs)) for diseases of the circulatory system (total (a)) and for ischaemic heart disease (b) (IHD), cerebrovascular disease (c) and heart failure (d) among those aged 15–44 years with burn injury versus no injury.