| Literature DB >> 24093225 |
Jane A Snell, Ne-Hooi W Loh, Tushar Mahambrey, Kayvan Shokrollahi.
Abstract
Between 4 and 22% of burn patients presenting to the emergency department are admitted to critical care. Burn injury is characterised by a hypermetabolic response with physiologic, catabolic and immune effects. Burn care has seen renewed interest in colloid resuscitation, a change in transfusion practice and the development of anti-catabolic therapies. A literature search was conducted with priority given to review articles, meta-analyses and well-designed large trials; paediatric studies were included where adult studies were lacking with the aim to review the advances in adult intensive care burn management and place them in the general context of day-to-day practical burn management.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24093225 PMCID: PMC4057496 DOI: 10.1186/cc12706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
American Burn Association suggested definitions for utilising systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria in burn patients
| The sepsis trigger in adult burn patient includes at least three of the following: |
| Temperature >39°C or <36.5°C |
| Progressive tachycardia |
| Adults >110 bpm |
| Progressive tachypnoea |
| >25 bpm not ventilated |
| Minute ventilation >12 l/minute ventilated |
| Thrombocytopaenia (not applicable until 3 days after initial resuscitation) |
| Adults <100,000/μl |
| Hyperglycaemia (absence of pre-existing diabetes mellitus) |
| Untreated plasma glucose >200 mg/dl |
| Insulin resistance >7 units/hour insulin intravenous drip |
| >25% increase in insulin requirements over 24 hours |
| Inability to continue enteral feed >24 hours |
| Abdominal distention |
| Residual volume 2 × feeding rate |
| Diarrhoea >2,500 ml/day |