Suppr超能文献

Effect of inhalation injury on lung water accumulation.

作者信息

Tranbaugh R F, Elings V B, Christensen J M, Lewis F R

出版信息

J Trauma. 1983 Jul;23(7):597-604. doi: 10.1097/00005373-198307000-00009.

Abstract

Fourteen thermally injured patients with severe inhalation injury were sequentially studied with the thermal-green dye double indicator dilution technique of extravascular lung water (EVLW) measurement. Eight females and six males (average age, 49 years, and average thermal burn, 37% body surface) were studied for 2-31 days postinjury. All were burned in a closed space, had facial burns, soot in their sputum, and a mean carboxyhemoglobin level of 30%. Nine patients died, six of sepsis, one each of acute renal failure, hepatorenal syndrome, and anoxic brain damage. Mean EVLW on admission was 7.0 +/- 2.9 ml/kg and remained normal in the five survivors and in the patients dying of acute renal failure and anoxic brain damage. Six patients had increases in EVLW, caused by altered pulmonary capillary permeability in five and by elevation of hydrostatic pressures in one patient (hepatorenal death). Of the five patients with permeability edema, one appeared to result from a direct early effect of inhalation injury resulting in an EVLW of 13.3 ml/kg on admission. The other four patients had EVLW increases after the onset of sepsis, resulting in a mean EVLW of 23.2 +/0- 7.2 ml/kg at death (p less than 0.01). Seventy-one per cent of all patients developed pneumonia, which appears to have caused an EVLW increase in one patient; the other EVLW increases were caused by systemic sepsis. In our present study of 14 patients with definite severe inhalation injury only one had an early increase in EVLW directly related to the inhalation injury, an early effect on capillary permeability presumably caused by direct chemical toxicity of inhaled gases. The remaining four cases of permeability edema occurred 4-24 days postinjury and resulted from burn wound or pulmonary sepsis. We thus conclude that increases in EVLW after thermal and inhalational injury are primarily caused by systemic or pulmonary sepsis, and have a delayed onset. Early increases in EVLW may be a result of the chemical toxicity of inhaled gases but are very uncommon, moderate in degree, and are seen only with the severest cases of inhalation injury.

摘要

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验