Inhalation Injury: Unmet Clinical Needs and Future Research

Author:

Dyamenahalli Kiran1,Garg Gaurav2,Shupp Jeffrey W2,Kuprys Paulius V3,Choudhry Mashkoor A3,Kovacs Elizabeth J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Division of GI, Trauma and Endocrine Surgery, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora

2. Department of Surgery, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, District of Columbia

3. Department of Surgery, Burn & Shock Trauma Research Institute, Health Sciences Division, Loyola University, Maywood, Illinois

Abstract

Abstract Pulmonary and systemic insults from inhalation injury can complicate the care of burn patients and contribute to significant morbidity and mortality. However, recent progress in diagnosis and treatment of inhalation injury has not kept pace with the care of cutaneous thermal injury. There are many challenges unique to inhalation injury that have slowed advancement, including deficiencies in our understanding of its pathophysiology, the relative difficulty and subjectivity of bronchoscopic diagnosis, the lack of diagnostic biomarkers, the necessarily urgent manner in which decisions are made about intubation, and the lack of universal recommendations for the application of mucolytics, anticoagulants, bronchodilators, modified ventilator strategies, and other measures. This review represents a summary of critical shortcomings in our understanding and management of inhalation injury identified by the American Burn Association’s working group on Cutaneous Thermal Injury and Inhalation Injury in 2018. It addresses our current understanding of the diagnosis, pathophysiology, and treatment of inhalation injury and highlights topics in need of additional research, including 1) airway repair mechanisms; 2) the airway microbiome in health and after injury; and 3) candidate biomarkers of inhalation injury.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

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