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Critical care management in burns: A review of current evidence and guidelines -Part 1
Author(s) -
Umesh Jayarajah,
Oshan Basnayake,
Gayan Ekanayake
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
sri lanka journal of surgery/sri lanka journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2279-2201
pISSN - 0379-8240
DOI - 10.4038/sljs.v38i2.8664
Subject(s) - medical journal , sri lanka , medicine , peer review , alternative medicine , work (physics) , medical education , public relations , family medicine , political science , law , sociology , pathology , mechanical engineering , ethnology , south asia , engineering
Recent literature on the management of critically ill patients have altered the beliefs and clinical behaviours, questioning many dogmas that were practiced without much evidence. The critical care in a severely burn-injured patient requires special attention in resuscitation, haemodynamic monitoring, management of complications, organ support and determinants of outcome. The goal of resuscitation is to maintain intravascular volume and tone while correcting the reversible changes in altered physiology, aided by early debridement of burned tissue and elimination of the source of physiological derangement. Practitioners should target resuscitation based on goal-directed therapy using noninvasive markers of cardiac output. The management requires the input of a multi-disciplinary team to achieve critical care and early surgical intervention and management of complications and organ support.

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