Infectious Diseases in Critical Care Medicine

(ff) #1

  1. Wilson SJ, Knipe CJ, Zieger MJ, et al. Direct costs of multi-drug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii in
    the burn unit of a public teaching hospital. Am J Infect Control 2004; 32:342–344.

  2. Goverman J, Weber JM, Keaney TJ, et al. Intravenous colistin for the treatment of multi-drug resistant,
    Gram-negative infection in the pediatric burn population. J Burn Care Res 2007; 28:421–426.

  3. Nash G, Foley FD, Goodwin MN, et al. Fungal burn wound infection. JAMA 1971; 215:1664–1666.

  4. Becker WK, Cioffi WG, McManus AT, et al. Fungal burn wound infection — a ten year experience.
    Arch Surg 1991; 126:44–48.

  5. Cochran A, Morris SE, Edelman LS, et al. Systemic candida infection in burn patients: a case-control
    study of management patterns and outcomes. Surg Infect (Larchmnt) 2002; 3:367–374.

  6. Horvath EE, Murray CK, Vaughn GM, et al. Fungal wound infection (not colonisation) is
    independently associated with mortality in burn patients. Ann Surg 2007; 245:978–985.

  7. Murray CK, Loo FL, Hospenthal DR, et al. Incidence of systemic fungal infection and related mortality
    following severe burns. Burns 2008; 34:1108–1112.

  8. Steer JA, Papini RP, Wilson AP, et al. Quantitative microbiology in the management of burn patients.
    I. Correlation between quantitative and qualitative burn wound biopsy culture and surface alginate
    swab culture. Burns 1996; 22:173–176.

  9. Uppal SK, Ram S, Kwatra B, et al. Comparative evaluation of surface swab and quantitative full
    thickness wound biopsy culture in burn patients. Burns 2007; 33:460–463.

  10. Pruitt BA Jr., McManus AT, Kim SH. Use of burn wound biopsies in the diagnosis and treatment of
    burn wound infection. In: Lorenz S, Zellner P-R, eds. Die Infektion Beim Brand Verletzten. Darmstadt,
    Germany: Steinkopff Verlag Darmstadt, 1993; 55–63.

  11. Schofield CM, Murray CK, Horvath EE, et al. Correlation of culture with histopathology in fungal
    burn wound colonisation and infection. Burns 2007; 33:341–346.

  12. Kim SH, Hubbard GB, McManus WF, et al. Frozen section technique to evaluate early burn wound
    biopsy: comparison with the rapid section technique. J Trauma 1985; 25:1134–1137.

  13. Sasaki TM, Welch GW, Herndon DN, et al. Burn wound manipulation-induced bacteremia. J Trauma
    1979; 19:46–48.

  14. Mozingo DW, McManus AT, Kim SH, et al. The Incidence of bacteremia following burn wound
    manipulation in the early post-burn period. J Trauma 1997; 42:1006–1011.

  15. Mason AD Jr., McManus AT, Pruitt BA Jr. Association of burn mortality and bacteremia: a 25-year
    review. Arch Surg 1986; 121:127–1031.

  16. Pruitt BA Jr., McManus AT, Kim SH. Burns Chapter 98. In: Gorbach SL, Bartlett JG, Blacklow NR, eds.
    Infectious Diseases. 3rd ed. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2004:860.

  17. Murray CK, Hoffmaster RM, Schmit DR, et al. Evaluation of white blood cell count, neutrophil
    percentage, and elevated temperature as predictors of bloodstream infection in burn patients. Arch
    Surg 2007; 142:639–642.

  18. Wolf SE, Jeschke MG, Rose JK, et al. Enteral feeding intolerance: an indicator of sepsis associated
    mortality in burned children. Arch Surg 1997; 132:1310–1314.

  19. Fitzwater J, Purdue GF, Hunt JL, et al. The risk factors and time course of sepsis and organ
    dysfunction after burn trauma. J Trauma 2003; 54:959–966.

  20. Barber RC, Aragaki CC, Rivera-Chavez FA, et al. TLR4 and TNF polymorphisms are associated with
    an increased risk for severe sepsis following burn injury. J Med Genet 2004; 41:808–813.

  21. Fidler PE, Mackool BT, Schoefeld DA, et al. Incidence, outcome, and long-term consequences of
    herpes simplex-virus type 1 reactivation presenting as a facial rash in intubated adult burn patients
    treated with acyclovir. J Trauma 2002; 53:86–89.

  22. Shirani KZ, Vaughn GM, Mason AD, et al. Update on current therapeutic approaches in burns. Shock
    1996; 5:4–16.

  23. Barillo DJ, McManus AT. Infection in burned patients. In: Coen J, Powderly WG, eds. Infectious
    Diseases. 2nd ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier, 2003.

  24. de La Cal MA, Cerda E, Garcia-Hierro P, et al. Pneumonia in patients with severe burns; a
    classification according to the carrier state. Chest 2001; 119:1160–1165.

  25. Rue LW III, Cioffi WG, Mason AD, et al. Improved survival of burned patients with inhalation injury.
    Arch Surg 1993; 128:772–780.

  26. Taneja N, Emmanuel R, Chari PS, et al. A prospective study of hospital acquired infections in burn
    patients at a tertiary care referral centre in North India. Burns 2004; 30: 665–669.

  27. Geyik MF, Aldemir M, Hosoglu S, et al. Epidemiology of burn units infections in children. Am J Infect
    Control 2003; 31:342–346.

  28. Santucci SG, Gobara S, Santos CR, et al. Infections in a burn intensive care unit: experience of seven
    years. J Hosp infect 2003; 53:6–13.


374 Wolf et al.

Free download pdf