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Inhalation injury treated with extracorporeal CO2 elimination.

Abstract
A 38-year-old male was admitted to the intensive care unit with a full-thickness burn involving 30 per cent of his total body surface area (TBSA) and severe inhalation injury. Respiratory failure developed within 54 h and CO2 could not be eliminated, even by very invasive mechanical ventilation. Because of the patient's age and the minor extent of the burned TBSA, we started extracorporeal CO2 elimination (ECCO2-R) and continued ECCO2-R for 30 days, when the patient was weaned from ECC. The clinical course during ECCO2-R was complicated by major bleeding from a thoracotomy tube, from the site of tangential excision and by four septic episodes. Lung biopsy was performed twice on day 29 (during ECCO2-R) and day 58 (after ECCO2-R) after admission and revealed bronchiolitis obliterans without tendency to recovery. The patient died of sepsis with multiorgan failure on day 81 after trauma.
AuthorsE Kornberger, P Mair, E Oswald, C Hörmann, K Ohler, D Balogh
JournalBurns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries (Burns) Vol. 23 Issue 4 Pg. 354-9 (Jun 1997) ISSN: 0305-4179 [Print] Netherlands
PMID9248648 (Publication Type: Case Reports, Journal Article)
Chemical References
  • Carbon Dioxide
Topics
  • Adult
  • Blood Gas Analysis
  • Burns, Inhalation (blood, complications, therapy)
  • Carbon Dioxide (blood)
  • Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (methods)
  • Fatal Outcome
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Humans
  • Hypoxia (blood, etiology, therapy)
  • Male
  • Respiratory Insufficiency (blood, complications, therapy)
  • Sepsis (etiology)

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