1. The association between body mass index and physical function in adult burn survivors: A Burn Model System National Database study.
- Author
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Palackic A, Rontoyanni VG, Kleinhapl J, Franco-Mesa C, Branski LK, Herndon DN, Schneider J, Roaten K, Ryan CM, Kowalske K, Gibran N, Stewart B, Wolf SE, and Suman-Vejas OE
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Databases, Factual, Thinness epidemiology, Overweight epidemiology, Aged, United States epidemiology, Recovery of Function, Self Report, Linear Models, Burns rehabilitation, Burns physiopathology, Body Mass Index, Obesity epidemiology, Survivors statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Introduction: An area of rehabilitation research in burns is the impact of co-morbidities on disease trajectory. Obesity is a comorbidity of increasing public health concern, but its role remains controversial regarding burn injury and physical recovery. Our aim was to evaluate the association between body mass index (BMI) categories as a measure of obesity at discharge and self-reported physical function (PF) during recovery of adult burn survivors., Methods: This is a retrospective study on data collected by four major US burn centers, which contribute to the Burn Model System National Database. The data included BMI obtained at hospital discharge and self-reported PF-mobility, using the PROMIS measures assessed at 6, 12, and 24 months after burn. Subjects were classified into weight status categories based on BMI: underweight (BMI <18.5), normal weight (18.5 ≤ BMI <25), overweight (25 ≤ BMI <30), obesity class 1 (30 ≤ BMI <35), obesity class 2 (35 ≤ BMI <40), and obesity class 3 (BMI ≥40). Mixed-effects linear regression models were used to assess the association between BMI categories and PF scores over time, adjusted for patient and injury characteristics., Results: A total of 496 adult burn patients aged 47 ± 16 years were included, with mean total body surface area (TBSA) burned of 18 ± 19 % and mean BMI at discharge of 28 ± 7 kg/m2. PROMIS PF scores significantly improved over time in the recovery phase after burn (time effect, p < 0.001). Compared to overweight burn patients, normal-underweights exhibited lower PF score by an average of 4.06 units (p = 0.001) but scores increased linearly by an estimated 0.17 units per month (p = 0.01) over the 24 months after discharge. Similarly, compared to overweight burn patients, class 1 obese reported lower PF score by a mean 2.67 units (p = 0.07) but PF increased linearly by 0.15 units per month (p = 0.07) over the 24 months after discharge. These findings were independent of the effects of age at discharge, sex, TBSA burned, and hand and leg burn., Conclusion: Being overweight was associated with improved and faster recovery of PF scores compared to normal, underweight, and obese burn patients during long-term recovery. Hence, our data suggests that long-term recovery and restoration of PF in adult burn survivors is not compromised by a small excess in body weight., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors report no conflicts of interest other than SEW is the Editor of this journal., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd and International Society of Burns Injuries. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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