Predictors and Correlates of Pediatric Postburn Pruritus in Preschool Children of Ages 0 to 4

Author:

Stewart Dylan1,Caradec Jill2,Ziegfeld Susan1,Reynolds Elizabeth3,Ostrander Rick3,Parrish Carisa3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

2. Department of Psychology, Loyola University Maryland, Baltimore

3. Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

AbstractPruritus is a common problem following burn injuries; however, the literature to date has focused on adult survivors and/or pediatric survivors of large burns. The current study examines acute postburn pruritus in children under the age of 4 years (N = 256) with smaller burns (mean TBSA = 3.99%), which represents the most common type of patient typically treated in pediatric burn centers. Parents rated their child for pruritus, irritability, and sleep disturbances; additionally, parents completed a self-report of distress. Nearly half (47.3%) were rated by parents as displayed some level of pruritus, with the greatest proportion rated as mild. Regression analysis indicated that child minority status, greater burn TBSA, and more days elapsed since burn predicted higher levels of pruritus. In turn, pruritus was positively correlated with child irritability, delayed sleep onset, sleep disturbance, and parent distress. Thus, our results indicate that parent-rated pruritus in young pediatric burn patients is important to evaluate, as itch is significantly associated with other important clinical outcomes as early as the first month of the burn for pediatric patients and their parents.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

Reference26 articles.

1. Pruritus in burns: review article;Goutos;J Burn Care Res,2009

2. Pruritus in adult burn survivors;Carrougher;J Burn Care Res,2013

3. Postburn itch: a review of the literature;Nedelec;Wounds,2018

4. Rimmer R , BayR, SadlerIet al. Are pain and itching causing sleep disruption in pediatric burn patients? Presented at the 44th Annual Meeting of the American Burn Association, Seattle, Washington, USA, April 24–272012.

5. Pruritus in pediatric burn survivors: defining the clinical course;Schneider;J Burn Care Res,2015

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