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Smoke Inhalation

Clinical Techniques in Small Animal Practice, 2006
Unfortunately, fires are common events both in urban and rural portions of the United States. Smoke inhalation is the leading fire-related cause of death. The elemental combustion products of fire are light, heat, and smoke. Smoke is a very complex mixture of potentially harmful substances.
Kevin T, Fitzgerald, Aryn A, Flood
openaire   +3 more sources

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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Smoke Inhalation Injury

Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2001
Smoke inhalation injuries are the leading cause of fatalities from burn injury. The major forms of inhalation injuries are carbon monoxide toxicity, injury to the upper airway, and pulmonary parenchymal damage. The compromised airway is protected by tracheal intubation, and respiratory failure is treated with assisted ventilation.
B A, Latenser, L, Iteld
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Smoke inhalation injuries

American Journal of Otolaryngology, 1986
Up to a third of all victims of major burns suffer smoke-related injury and may die as a result of inhalation injury. The management of the upper airway depends on a thorough understanding of the mechanisms of injury, including carbon monoxide toxicity, thermal injury, and smoke inhalation.
L, Robinson, R H, Miller
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Smoke Inhalation Study

Annals of Plastic Surgery, 1980
An aggressive approach to the treatment of patients sustaining combined thermal and inhalation injuries is presented. Early and repeated bronchoscopy for diagnosis and treatment has yielded improved results.
R B, Weil   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Smoke-Inhalation Injuries

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1981
THE LETHAL effects of smoke inhalation have been known as far back as the first century AD when Pliny reported that the Romans executed prisoners by placing them over the smoke of green wood fires.1The November 1980 fire at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas serves as a grim reminder of the dangers of fire-related smoke.
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Smoke Inhalation

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1990
Two cases of smoke inhalation injury are reported with a brief review of the pertinent literature. The frequency of occurrence, the mortality rate, the clinical course of this common event are discussed with emphasis on the following facts: 1) Pulmonary injury is often associated with skin burns and, conversely, skin burns, particularly when severe ...
M C, Battigelli   +2 more
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Smoke inhalation injury

Postgraduate Medicine, 1987
Smoke inhalation injury is responsible for more deaths after fire than actual body burns. Many of the effects of heat and chemical burns to the airways are delayed and may not be clinically evident at first. Chest films are often not helpful, and direct laryngoscopic or bronchofibroscopic examination or a ventilation-perfusion scan may be necessary to ...
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Smoke Inhalation Injury

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1994
Smoke inhalation injury in children still represents a significant cause of pulmonary disease and mortality. Carbon monoxide and other toxic products of combustion are major determinants of severity. Early hypoxemia is a contributor to over 50% of deaths.
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Managing Smoke Inhalation Injuries

Postgraduate Medicine, 1989
Inhalation injuries most often occur with cutaneous burns, and the likelihood of an inhalation injury increases incrementally with age of the patient and size of the burn. Damage to the pulmonary parenchymal tissue manifests as increased capillary permeability leading to excessive lung fluid formation and increasing hypoxia. An inhalation injury may be
M H, Desai, R L, Rutan, D N, Herndon
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