Abstract

We present an interesting case of the first adult reported in the United States to suffer from thermal burns, adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and to be treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) who survived. Our patient is a 26 year old male who sustained thermal burns (12% TBSA) to his face and anterior trunk and bronoscopically demonstrable inhalation injury. He was transported to our regional burn center for burn wound care and ventilatory support. The patient was treated with silver sulfadiazine 1% to his wounds which healed per primam. Because of low oxygen saturation he required increasing FIO 2. The following parameters: FIO 2 = 1, PEEP = 17, minute ventilation of 15.11, peak airway pressure of 45 and mean of 27, along with chest X-rays corroborated the severity of ARDS. The patient failed volume control ventilation. A trial of pressure ventilation was attempted but the patient only reached O 2 saturation in the low 80s. At this point, the decision was made to transfer the patient to a hospital capable of ECMO treatment. The patient was subsequently treated with veno-venous ECMO. Six weeks later the patient was discharged from the hospital off all ventilatory support.

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