• J Burn Care Rehabil · Mar 2001

    Comparative Study

    Chest radiographic appearances in severely burned adults. A comparison of early radiographic and extravascular lung thermal volume changes.

    • M T Chrysopoulo, R E Barrow, M Muller, S Rubin, L N Barrow, and D N Herndon.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, USA.
    • J Burn Care Rehabil. 2001 Mar 1; 22 (2): 104-10.

    AbstractChest radiographs (CXRs) have previously been used as a diagnostic tool to detect changes in lung water. In this study CXR changes in severely burned adults, in the absence of an inhalation injury, preceded detectable increases in extravascular lung thermal volume (ELTV) by 3 to 5 days. The hypothesis that early CXR density changes in burned patients have an infectious cause, not related to changes in ELTV, was tested. Blood cultures, CXRs, and ELTV were evaluated during the first 15 days after injury in severely burned adults who had no identified inhalation injury. Chest radiographs were scored daily on a 1 to 5 scale, with 1 = normal, 2 = peribronchial cuffing, 3 = mild interstitial infiltrates, 4 = severe interstitial infiltrates, and 5 = alveolar infiltrates. In all patients, except those who were septic, increases in their CXR density scores correlated well with increases in ELTV. The ELTV/CXR score ratios for septic burn patients on days 1 to 6 postburn was 1.7 +/- 0.2 compared with 4.2 +/- 0.4, (means +/- SEM) for nonseptic (P < .001), whereas the ELTV/CXR score ratios for septic and nonseptic patients, 7 to 15 days postburn, were 3.8 +/- 0.4 and 3.4 +/- 0.5, respectively. We suggest that before any measurable change in ELTV early increases in CXR density scores in burned patients without a concomitant inhalation injury are caused by intraalveolar pneumonitis or hyaline membrane atelectasis and not increased ELTV.

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