Surréanimation liquidienne pré et intrahospitatière des patients brûlés: fréquente et néfaste [Pre- and intra-hospital over-resuscitation in burns: frequent and deleterious].


Autoria(s): Berger M.M.; Revelly J.P.; Carron P.N.; Bernath M.A.
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Major burns are characterized by an initial capillary leak which requires fluid resuscitation for hemodynamic stabilisation. While under-resuscitation was the major cause of death until the 80ies, over-resuscitation has become an important source of complications: abdominal compartment syndrome, escharotomies, impaired gas exchange and prolonged mechanical ventilation and hospital stay. The fluid creep started in the 90ies with an increasing proportion of the first 24 hours' fluid delivery above the 4 ml/kg/% BSA Parkland prediction. The first alerts were published under the form of case reports of increased mortality due to abdominal compartment syndrome and respiratory failure. The paper analyses the causes of this fluid creep, and the ways to prevent it, which includes rationing prehospital fluid delivery, avoiding early colloids and permissive hypovolemia.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_D35E3507FC17

isbn:1660-9379[print], 1660-9379[linking]

pmid:21268421

Idioma(s)

fr

Fonte

Revue Médicale Suisse, vol. 6, no. 275, pp. 2410-2415

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article