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Challenges in Treating COVID-19 Patients With Severe Burn Injuries.

Here we present a case report of a young female patient with severe burn injury inflicting 27% of total body surface area (TBSA) associated with COVID-19 infection. Upon admission, Acinetobacter spp . (sensitive only to Colistin ) was isolated from the wound swabs of the right arm, hand and thorax. On the fifth day after admission, a surgical excision was performed and 12% of TBSA was covered with homotransplants. The following day the patient had a sudden drop in oxygen saturation with hypotension (85/45 mmHg). Additionally, agitation, visual and auditory hallucinations were noticed. We found a massive pleural effusion on the left side and pneumonic foci on the right side. On the thirteenth day after admission the final surgical excision and homotransplantation of the skin were performed. In the following days, debridement of all necrotic tissue and covering of all the burned areas with homotransplants were done. Hemodynamic instability of the patient progressed along with the finding on the chest radiography, despite the local finding including adherent homotransplants with no signs of lysis or local infection at the wound beds. Due to low oxygen saturation, the patient was intubated on the fourteenth day after admission. Despite the measures taken, the lethal outcome occurred on the twenty-fifth day after admission to our Clinic. A decision on the right timing for surgical treatment in severely burned COVID-19 patients needs to be investigated in order to enable surgeons to make evidence-based decisions during the pandemic.

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