严重烧伤及吸入性损伤的早期体外膜氧合及烧伤切除术。

Scars, burns & healing Pub Date : 2024-12-11 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/20595131241302942
Andrew P Bain, Isabel Garcia, Matthew Leveno, Chiaka Akarichi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

引言:体外膜性氧合(ECMO)作为严重急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)患者的挽救性治疗已被描述,但在烧伤病例中的经验有限。很少有病例报告详细介绍ECMO的使用和烧伤切除的设置。病例:在这里,我们描述了一名40岁的女性,在一场房屋火灾中被发现,她的身体表面有30%的烧伤和严重的吸入性损伤,导致ARDS。损伤后12小时开始静脉-静脉ECMO, ECMO总运行523小时。在此期间,她接受了三次切线切除手术,术中和术后出血并发症明显,总共需要37单位的填充红细胞,8个血小板池,24单位的新鲜冷冻血浆和1单位的冷冻沉淀。患者成功脱离静脉-静脉ECMO。在ECMO脱管后,她需要进行6次后续手术,以控制感染并完全切除全层烧伤。最终,她被送至一家住院康复机构。讨论:该报告首次详细描述了烧伤切除术期间ECMO的围手术期复苏,并增加了关于烧伤患者ECMO支持的文献。本病例特别强调了在ECMO期间进行烧伤切除的多学科护理和资源需求,以及相关的出血并发症。对于采用ECMO治疗的烧伤合并ARDS患者凝血功能障碍管理和外科护理的最佳时机、患者选择和策略需要进一步的研究。总结:严重烧伤患者的肺部可能会因吸烟和严重烧伤对身体造成的压力而受到相关损伤。这种损伤可能非常严重,因此需要辅助机器,通过向血液中添加氧气来完成肺部的工作,称为体外膜氧合(ECMO)。这些极端措施对于治疗严重呼吸系统疾病至关重要,并已被纳入对肺部严重受损的烧伤患者的护理。ECMO需要大量的资源,并且存在出血和凝血问题等风险。严重烧伤的患者还需要手术去除烧伤的皮肤,减少对身体的压力。只有少数病例被描述为在患者接受ECMO支持的情况下进行烧伤手术。在我们护理严重烧伤患者并进行多次ECMO手术的经验中,我们遇到了ECMO继发的多种出血并发症,导致需要大量的输血产品。一个月后,患者肺功能恢复,无需体外膜肺氧合。患者在完成额外必要的烧伤手术后存活出院。本报告是第一个详细解释在ECMO下对患者进行烧伤切除的经验。我们描述了成功所需的资源和团队成员,并认为必须进行进一步的研究,以最好地管理ECMO时的烧伤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Early extracorporeal membranous oxygenation and burn excision in severe burn and inhalation injury.

Introduction: Extracorporeal membranous oxygenation (ECMO) as a salvage therapy for patients with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) has been described but experience is limited in burn cases. Few case reports detail the use of ECMO the setting of burn excision.

Case: Here, we describe a 40-year-old female found down in a house fire who presented with 30% total body surface area burns and severe inhalation injury resulting in ARDS. Veno-venous ECMO was initiated 12 h after injury, with a total ECMO run of 523 h. In that time, she underwent three tangential excisions with significant intraoperative and postoperative bleeding complications requiring in total 37 units of packed red blood cells, 8 pools of platelets, 24 units of fresh frozen plasma, and 1 unit of cryoprecipitate. The patient was successfully weaned from veno-venous ECMO. She required six subsequent excisions after her ECMO decannulation for both infection control and complete excision of her full-thickness burns. She was ultimately discharged to an inpatient rehabilitation facility.

Discussion: This report serves as the first detailed description of perioperative resuscitation on ECMO during burn excision and adds to the body of literature regarding ECMO support in the burned patient. This case specifically highlights the multidisciplinary care and resource demands of performing burn excision during ECMO as well as the associated bleeding complications of doing so. Further study is needed to define optimal timing, patient selection, and strategy for coagulopathy management and surgical care of the burn patient with ARDS treated with ECMO.

Lay summary: Patients with severe burn injuries can have associated injuries to their lungs from both smoke and as a response to the stress a severe burn puts on the body. The injuries can be so severe that supportive machines can be needed that do the work of the lungs by adding oxygen to the blood, called extracorporeal membranous oxygenation (ECMO). These extreme measures are critical to supporting severe respiratory problems and have been incorporated into caring for burn patients with severely injured lungs. ECMO requires significant resources and has risks, including bleeding and clotting issues. Severely burned patients also need surgery to remove burned skin and decrease the stress placed on the body. Only a handful of cases have been described where burn surgery has been performed while a patient was on ECMO support. In our experience caring for a severely burned patient and performing multiple surgeries on ECMO, we encountered multiple bleeding complications secondary to the use of ECMO, resulting in large amounts of transfusion products needed. After one month, the patient's lungs recovered and ECMO was not needed. The patient survived to discharge from the hospital after completion of additional necessary burn surgeries. This report is the first to explain in detail the experience of performing burn excision on a patient on ECMO. We describe the resources and team members needed for success and believe further research must be done to best manage burn injuries while on ECMO.

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