Brown M, Traber D L, Herndon D N, Oldham K T, Traber L D
Burns Incl Therm Inj. 1987 Feb;13(1):34-8. doi: 10.1016/0305-4179(87)90253-1.
Smoke inhalation injury now represents the most frequent cause of death in burn patients, and accounts for 20-80 per cent of overall mortality. We have studied the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) to support sheep which have received lethal pulmonary smoke damage. The animals (n = 19) received inhalation injury induced by insufflation with smoke derived from burning cotton delivered with a bee smoker. The treatment group, those placed on ECMO at the time of injury (n=6), were systemically heparinized and placed on a venovenous perfusion circuit consisting of a roller pump, membrane oxygenator and heat exchanger. Blood flow rate in the circuit approximated 20-25 per cent of cardiac output. The animals remained on partial venovenous bypass until the termination of the experiment 96 h after injury. All animals in the treatment group survived. The control sheep (n = 7) received inhalation injury alone and had a 100 per cent mortality (P = 0.0015 ECMO vs. control). Ventilatory management of treatment and control groups followed an identical protocol. We have also studied a third group (n = 6) composed of animals receiving inhalation injury with systemic heparinization but not ECMO. This group had a 66 per cent mortality at 96 h. These studies suggest that partial venovenous ECMO may be a valuable form of adjunctive treatment in severe inhalation injury.