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Inhalation Injury (inhalation + injury)
Selected AbstractsEarly Laryngeal Inhalation Injury and its Correlation with Late SequelaeTHE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 2 2006Tulio A. Valdez MD Abstract Objective: Inhalation injury can permanently alter normal laryngeal function. The aim of this study was to examine the early changes in voice, swallowing, and breathing in laryngeal inhalation injuries. Study Design: This was a prospective analysis of nine patients with inhalation injuries at a tertiary care institution. Methods: Laryngeal function of patients admitted for inhalation injury requiring intubation was documented using videostroboscopy and swallowing evaluation by the speech pathology service. Bronchoscopy was used to classify the degree of inhalation injury. Association among total body surface area, facial burns, severity of laryngotracheal injuries, and loss of function was attempted. Results: All three patients with severe tracheal inhalation injury presented persistent hoarseness at 1-year follow up with abnormal videostroboscopy findings. No association was found between inhalation injury and total body surface area burned. None of the patients in this series presented permanent swallowing dysfunction. Conclusion: The otolaryngologist plays an important role in the initial and long-term management of inhalation injuries. Inhalation injuries should be managed in a multidisciplinary fashion. There may be a correlation between the degree of tracheal injury and laryngeal injury and hoarseness. [source] The Association Between Hypothermia, Prehospital Cooling, and Mortality in Burn VictimsACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 4 2010Adam J. Singer MD Abstract Objectives:, Hypothermia is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in trauma victims. The prognostic value of hypothermia on emergency department (ED) presentation in burn victims is not well known. The objective of this study was to determine the incidence of hypothermia in burn victims and its association with mortality and hospital length of stay (LOS). The study also examined the potential causative role of prehospital cooling in hypothermic burn patients. Methods:, This was a retrospective review of a county trauma registry. The county was both suburban and rural, with a population of 1.5 million and with one burn center. Burn patients between 1994 and 2007 who met trauma registry criteria were included. Demographic and clinical data including prehospital cooling, burn size and depth, and presence of inhalation injury were collected. Hypothermia was defined as a core body temperature of less than or equal to 35°C. Data analysis consisted of univariate associations between patient characteristics and hypothermia. Results:, There were 1,215 burn patients from 1994 to 2007. Mean age (±standard deviation [±SD]) was 29 (±24) years, 67% were male, 248 (26.7%) had full-thickness burns, and 24 (2.6%) had inhalation injury. Only 17 (1.8%) had a burn larger than 70% total body surface area (TBSA). A total of 929 (76%) patients had an initial ED temperature recorded. Only 15/929 (1.6%) burn patients had hypothermia on arrival, and all were mild (lowest temperature was 32.6°C). There was no association between sex, year, and presence of inhalation injury with hypothermia. Hypothermic patients were older (44 years vs. 29 years, p = 0.01), and median Injury Severity Score (ISS) was higher (25 vs. 4, p = 0.002) than for nonhypothermic patients. Hypothermia was present in 6/17 (35%) patients with a TBSA of 70% or greater and in 8/869 (0.9%) patients with a TBSA of <70% (p < 0.001). Mortality was higher in hypothermic patients (60% vs. 3%, p < 0.001). None of the hypothermic patients received prehospital cooling. Conclusions:, Hypothermia on presentation to the ED was noted in 1.6% of all burn victims in this trauma registry. Hypothermia was more common in very large burns and was associated with high mortality. In this series, prehospital cooling did not appear to contribute to hypothermia. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:456,459 © 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine [source] Early Laryngeal Inhalation Injury and its Correlation with Late SequelaeTHE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 2 2006Tulio A. Valdez MD Abstract Objective: Inhalation injury can permanently alter normal laryngeal function. The aim of this study was to examine the early changes in voice, swallowing, and breathing in laryngeal inhalation injuries. Study Design: This was a prospective analysis of nine patients with inhalation injuries at a tertiary care institution. Methods: Laryngeal function of patients admitted for inhalation injury requiring intubation was documented using videostroboscopy and swallowing evaluation by the speech pathology service. Bronchoscopy was used to classify the degree of inhalation injury. Association among total body surface area, facial burns, severity of laryngotracheal injuries, and loss of function was attempted. Results: All three patients with severe tracheal inhalation injury presented persistent hoarseness at 1-year follow up with abnormal videostroboscopy findings. No association was found between inhalation injury and total body surface area burned. None of the patients in this series presented permanent swallowing dysfunction. Conclusion: The otolaryngologist plays an important role in the initial and long-term management of inhalation injuries. Inhalation injuries should be managed in a multidisciplinary fashion. There may be a correlation between the degree of tracheal injury and laryngeal injury and hoarseness. [source] |