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. 2021 Dec 25;14(4):315–322. doi: 10.3400/avd.ra.21-00026

Table 2 Selected publications dealing with burns and intoxication impact on venous disease.

First author, year Disaster Population DVT PE Assessment tools F-up Identified risk factors Study design
Wahl WL, 2001 Burns 327 2.4% NR US NR -Infections -Hospital length of stay Review
Harrington D, 2001 Burns 1300 2.9% 2.9% US, CT 5.5 y -Age -TBSA Retrospective analysis
Ahuja RB, 2016 Burns 50 8% NR US Not specified -BMI -TBSA -Prolonged immobility -Longer duration of stay -D-dimer (day 5) Randomized controlled trial
Lim YP, 2015 Organophosphate intoxication 9223 Adjusted hazard ratio=1.55 Adjusted hazard ratio=1.44 US 11 y OP intoxication Longitudinal cohort study
Chung W, 2015 Carbon monoxide poisoning 8316 3.85-fold higher risk of DVT Not significantly associated with risk of PE US, CT 11 y Carbon monoxide intoxication Retrospective case-control
Shen C, 2017 Alcohol intoxication 61,229 Risk of DVT=3.40 higher Risk of DVT=3.53 higher US, CT 10 y Alcohol intoxication Retrospective case-control

DVT: deep venous thrombosis; PE: pulmonary embolism; F-UP: follow-up; NR: not reported; CT: computed tomography; US: ultrasound; y: year; BMI: body mass index; TBSA: total body surface area; OP: organophosphate intoxication