The Journal of burn care & rehabilitation
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jul 1989
Use of Pseudomonas hyperimmunoglobulin to treat septic shock in burn cases.
The progress of 18 episodes of septic shock in nine patients with burn injuries after administration of a Pseudomonas immunoglobulin is presented. In nine instances the septic shock was treated successfully. The mean burn index of these nine patients was 96. ⋯ Despite the different causative agents, successful treatment was possible in these cases. The mean burn index for the four patients who eventually died was 119; all patients in this group were suffering from an inhalation trauma and acute kidney failure requiring dialysis. In these cases even the use of Pseudomonas immunoglobulin had no decisive effect.
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J Burn Care Rehabil · Jan 1989
Smoke inhalation and airway management at a regional burn unit: 1974-1983. Part I: Diagnosis and consequences of smoke inhalation.
Victims of smoke inhalation with and without burns and burn patients with respiratory insufficiency for reasons other than smoke at a regional burn unit are profiled in terms of age, burn size, length of stay, and mortality. The diagnostic characteristics of patients with an inhalation injury (N = 108) are listed; 7% of all patients (N = 52) have known smoke exposure with equivocal evidence for injury to the airway or pulmonary parenchyma. ⋯ Many of the clues to this diagnosis are indirect and not always related to the severity of pulmonary injury. Timing and degree of visceral failure control the severity of the injury, which increases progressively from that in patients with a burn only (parietal injury) through those with a visceral injury only (smoke without burn), those with both smoke and burn, to those with a burn and uniformly severe respiratory failure on the basis of sepsis.
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Hypothesizing that reduced blood flow to various levels in thermally damaged dermis is related to the depth of burn, we studied 59 burns in 41 patients, with an age range of 18 months to 67 years, with improved laser Doppler blood flow technology to determine burn depth on admission. Two hundred and sixty-eight laser Doppler measurements were made in 59 burn wounds in 41 patients. ⋯ Therefore predictive value of a positive result (i.e., laser Doppler value less than 1.4) on admission was 98.4% using laser Doppler measurements. Clinical estimation did not correlate as well with the depth of injury.