Annals of emergency medicine
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Inhalation injuries occur in approximately one-third of all major burns and account for a significant number of deaths in those burn patients each year. Victims die as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning, hypoxia, and smoke inhalation. These deaths can occur without thermal wounds as well as with burn injuries. ⋯ Smoke inhalation significantly damages normal respiratory physiology, resulting in injury progressing from acute pulmonary insufficiency to pulmonary edema to bronchopneumonia, depending on the severity of exposure. Diagnosis is based on history, but clinical findings, arterial blood gases, and fiberoptic bronchoscopy are helpful. Treatment is supportive with careful attention paid to fluid resuscitation in the patient with burns.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Emergency physicians often encounter patients who have suffered burn injuries. Most are minor in nature but approximately 100,000 a year are true emergencies. Regardless of severity, the emergency physician and staff must possess the evaluative skills and knowledge of current treatment regimens to appropriately treat these patients. ⋯ Airway injuries, trauma other than the burn injury, treatment of shock, and pain relief are of the highest priority, overriding the management of the burn wound itself. The care that the minor burn victim receives is critical to ultimate outcome; the care that the major burn victim receives is critical to both immediate survival and ultimate outcome. The emergency physician must provide optimal care to ensure optimal results.