Publications by authors named "J P REMENSNYDER"

Background: Conventional wisdom and published reports suggest that children, particularly those younger than 48 months, have higher mortality rates after burns than young adults. However, coincident with refinements in resuscitation, operative techniques, and critical care, survival rates for children with burns seem to have improved. To document this change and to define current expectations, a review of deaths during two 7-year intervals separated by a decade was done.

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Infants (younger than 12 months) with large (more than 30%) burns are reported to have poorer chances for survival than older children with similar injuries. However, recent experience with such infants has been positive, prompting a 5-year review of management techniques. The injuries were approached in an organized fashion that included precise fluid support, excision, and biologic closure of full-thickness wounds within 5 days, limited exposure to high inflating pressures (more than 40 cm H2O), weekly replacement of central venous catheters, and intensive nutritional support via the enteral route whenever possible.

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Purpura fulminans (PF), which describes the necrosis of soft tissue secondary to diffuse microvascular thrombosis induced by transient protein C deficiency associated with meningococcal sepsis, is unusual despite the approximately 15000 cases of bacterial meningitis which occur annually in the USA. PF has a reported mortality of 50 per cent secondary to multiple organ failure which commonly accompanies the syndrome and is associated with major long-term morbidity in those who survive. Children who develop multiple organ failure in association with purpura fulminans are difficult management problems and benefit from the unique surgical and critical care resources available in burn centres.

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A joint Russian-American paediatric burn programme involving Childrens Hospital No. 9 in Moscow and Project HOPE in Millwood, Virginia emerged from the efforts of burn professionals from both countries in caring for a group of children seriously burned as a result of the train-pipeline catastrophe that occurred in June 1989 in the Ural Mountains. This paper describes the burn unit and its activities during the years 1985-93 and includes: (1) a general description of the physical and administrative structure of the unit; (2) the demography of burn admissions; (3) clinical activities; (4) a comparison of the clinical results of the years before the institution of the combined programme (1985-89) with those achieved during the first 4 years of the combined collaboration (1990-93).

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Burn units bring together resources to manage large complex wounds, organ failures, and the hypermetabolic response to injury. These resources can also facilitate management of other problems such as purpura fulminans, toxic epidermal necrolysis, staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome, and major mechanical soft-tissue injuries. During a recent 10-year interval 2.

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