KMID : 1155520170120030251
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Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2017 Volume.12 No. 3 p.251 ~ p.255
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Anesthetic management with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in a patient with acute airway obstruction after inhalation burn injury -A case report-
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Kim Yeong-Deok
Lee Joon-Hee Yoo Byung-Hoon Kim Mun-Cheol Lee Sang-Seok
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Abstract
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A 36-year-old woman was admitted to the intensive care unit because of an inhalation burn injury. Five days after admission, she developed dyspnea and hypercarbia. Therefore, fiberoptic bronchoscopy was performed through the endotracheal tube, which revealed foreign bodies in the tube. Tracheostomy was performed to remove, albeit incompletely, the foreign bodies (endotracheal debris). As sudden movement of the patient or airway reaction could cause the foreign bodies to move deeper into the bronchus during manipulation of the rigid bronchoscope, general anesthesia was induced and maintained by using total intravenous anesthesia with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). The foreign bodies were successfully removed without any other complications. This case showed that sloughed endobronchial debris after an inhalation burn injury caused acute airway obstruction. In such cases, alternative ventilation methods such as tracheostomy and ECMO may have to be applied, which can support a surgeon to focus on the procedure regardless of prolonged procedural time.
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KEYWORD
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Acute airway obstruction, Bronchoscopy, Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, Inhalation burn injury, Tracheostomy
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