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Inhalation injuries

Annals of Emergency Medicine, 1988
Inhalation injuries occur in approximately one-third of all major burns and account for a significant number of deaths in those burn patients each year. Victims die as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning, hypoxia, and smoke inhalation. These deaths can occur without thermal wounds as well as with burn injuries.
D M, Heimbach, J F, Waeckerle
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Toxic inhalational injury

BMJ Case Reports, 2020
A middle-aged patient presented with toxic inhalational injury, and was resuscitated prehospitally and treated in the emergency department for smoke inhalation, carbon monoxide (CO) exposure and cyanide poisoning with the use of antidotes. Due to the CO effects on spectrophotometry, an anaemia initially identified on blood gas analysis was thought to ...
Victoria, Davies   +2 more
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Inhalation Injuries

AACN Advanced Critical Care, 1990
Inhalation injuries comprise three distinct clinical entities that may be classified according to the time of onset of symptoms, etiologic agents, and the anatomic location of injury. These entities are carbon monoxide toxicity, upper airway obstruction, and smoke inhalation or chemical injury.
K A, Fitzgerald, E G, Mclaughlin
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Inhalation Injury: Smoke Inhalation

The American Journal of Nursing, 1980
noxious gases and particles which can produce such symptoms as hypoxemia, as well as orolaryngeal, tracheal, and pulmonary irritation and damage. Some of these gases are systemically toxic and some are toxic only to the lungs. Carbon monoxide (CO) is a systemically toxic gas produced from combustion; it is not a pulmonary irritant.
S F, Gaston, L L, Schumann
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