Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series

Aerosol sprays are commonly used products in daily living. Aerosols in kitchen products have prompted for use of ‘food grade’ or chemically inert propellants; however, they commonly contain gases or gaseous mixtures such as butane, propane and dimethyl ether that are flammable. When such sprays are...

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Main Authors: Anant Dinesh, Thais Polanco, Ryan Engdahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-09-01
Series:Scars, Burns & Healing
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2059513117728202
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spelling doaj-df23701d036446d6adc94281ca52b3312020-11-25T04:00:31ZengSAGE PublishingScars, Burns & Healing2059-51312017-09-01310.1177/2059513117728202Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case seriesAnant Dinesh0Thais Polanco1Ryan Engdahl2Department of Surgery, Harlem Hospital, Columbia University, New York, NY, USADepartment of Surgery, Harlem Hospital, Columbia University, New York, NY, USADivision of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Harlem Hospital, Columbia University, New York, NY, USAAerosol sprays are commonly used products in daily living. Aerosols in kitchen products have prompted for use of ‘food grade’ or chemically inert propellants; however, they commonly contain gases or gaseous mixtures such as butane, propane and dimethyl ether that are flammable. When such sprays are used near heat sources, such as kitchen appliances, combustibles in these products can result in ignition and burn injury. Given the ubiquity of such sprays, surprisingly burns sustained from household aerosols are not characterised in the literature. We conducted a retrospective search of all burn patients treated at our hospital which contains a burn unit. Three patients were identified with burn wounds due to household aerosol sprays. All three occurred in the kitchen. and were characterized as first-degree and second-degree burns over the head and neck or upper extremities with one requiring inpatient admission. Where it may be perceived a cause of minor injury, household aerosol burns may result in significant burn injury and hospital admission. Household aerosols and burn injury are reviewed.https://doi.org/10.1177/2059513117728202
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anant Dinesh
Thais Polanco
Ryan Engdahl
spellingShingle Anant Dinesh
Thais Polanco
Ryan Engdahl
Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
Scars, Burns & Healing
author_facet Anant Dinesh
Thais Polanco
Ryan Engdahl
author_sort Anant Dinesh
title Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
title_short Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
title_full Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
title_fullStr Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
title_full_unstemmed Burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
title_sort burns from ignited household aerosols in the kitchen: a case series
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Scars, Burns & Healing
issn 2059-5131
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Aerosol sprays are commonly used products in daily living. Aerosols in kitchen products have prompted for use of ‘food grade’ or chemically inert propellants; however, they commonly contain gases or gaseous mixtures such as butane, propane and dimethyl ether that are flammable. When such sprays are used near heat sources, such as kitchen appliances, combustibles in these products can result in ignition and burn injury. Given the ubiquity of such sprays, surprisingly burns sustained from household aerosols are not characterised in the literature. We conducted a retrospective search of all burn patients treated at our hospital which contains a burn unit. Three patients were identified with burn wounds due to household aerosol sprays. All three occurred in the kitchen. and were characterized as first-degree and second-degree burns over the head and neck or upper extremities with one requiring inpatient admission. Where it may be perceived a cause of minor injury, household aerosol burns may result in significant burn injury and hospital admission. Household aerosols and burn injury are reviewed.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2059513117728202
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