Results 251 to 260 of about 69,662 (295)
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Managing Smoke Inhalation Injuries
Postgraduate Medicine, 1989Inhalation 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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Postgraduate medicine, 1999
Pulmonary injury due to smoke inhalation is a significant cause of death in fire victims. Singed nasal hair and carbonaceous sputum are easily recognized warning signs, but other subtle clues should prompt thorough evaluation and aggressive treatment.
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Pulmonary injury due to smoke inhalation is a significant cause of death in fire victims. Singed nasal hair and carbonaceous sputum are easily recognized warning signs, but other subtle clues should prompt thorough evaluation and aggressive treatment.
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The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1989
A H, Hall, K W, Kulig, B H, Rumack
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A H, Hall, K W, Kulig, B H, Rumack
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Inhalational Injuries (Excluding Smoke Inhalation)
1991Toxic gas inhalation injuries occur as the result of occupational or domestic accidents, smoke inhalation, or military exposure. Most noxious inhalants directly irritate or damage the mucosa of the pharynx and tracheobronchial tree, producing erythema, edema, laryngospasm, and bronchospasm [272]. On occasion, mucosal ulceration and sloughing also occur.
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Pathophysiology, research challenges, and clinical management of smoke inhalation injury
Lancet, The, 2016Perenlei Enkhbaatar +2 more
exaly
Elevated Blood Cyanide Concentrations in Victims of Smoke Inhalation
New England Journal of Medicine, 1991Eric Vicaut, Alain Astier
exaly

