13 results match your criteria: "Burn Center at Washington Hospital Center[Affiliation]"

The bilayered dermal substitute Integra (Integra Life Sciences Corp., Plainsboro, NJ) was developed and has been widely used as primary coverage for excised acute burns. Our take has been slightly different, finding it most useful in the management of complex soft-tissue loss and threatened extremities as the result of tendon, joint, or bone exposure.

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Our previous studies confirmed the phenomenon of burn depth progression despite adequate Parkland formula resuscitation [Kim et al. J Burn Care Rehabil 2001;22960:406-6]. Repetitive ischemia-reperfusion injury (I-R) is a plausible explanation and is suggested by the concomitant swings we have observed in serum base deficit (BD) during resuscitation from burn shock.

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On September 11, 2001, an airplane flown by terrorists crashed into the Pentagon, causing a mass casualty incident with 189 deaths and 106 persons treated for injuries in local hospitals. Nine burn victims and one victim with an inhalation injury only were transported to the burn center hospital. The Burn Center at Washington Hospital Center admitted and treated the acute burn patients while continuing its mission as the regional burn center for the Washington DC region.

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Urinary output of 30 to 50 ml/hr and mean arterial pressure of more than 70 mm Hg continue to be the yardsticks by which patients with burn injuries are resuscitated. We designed this prospective, descriptive study to compare these parameters with serial base deficit and serum lactate values, which have been found to be sensitive indicators of adequate fluid resuscitation in trauma patients. The sample group consisted of 53 patients, consecutively admitted to the burn intensive care unit, who had 15% or more total body surface area burns.

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