Reducing the indication for Ventilatory support in the severely burned patient: Results of a new protocol approach at a regional burn center

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Jochen Gille - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)
  • Nicole Bauer - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)
  • Michael J. Malcharek - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)
  • Adrian Dragu - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)
  • Armin Sablotzki - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)
  • Hischam Taha - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)
  • Elke Czeslick - , Klinikum St. Georg Leipzig (Author)

Abstract

Initial management of the severely injured routinely includes sedation and mechanical ventilatory support. However, nonjudiciously applied mechanical ventilatory support can itself lead to poorer patient outcomes. In an attempt to reduce this iatrogenic risk, a standardized, in-house, five-point protocol providing clinical guidance on the use and duration of ventilation was introduced and analyzed, and the impact on patient outcomes was assessed. In 2007, a protocol for early spontaneous breathing was introduced and established in clinical practice. This protocol included: 1) early extubation (≤6 hours after admission) in the absence of absolute ventilatory indication; 2) avoidance of "routine intubation" in spontaneously breathing patients; 3) early postoperative extubation, including patients requiring multiple surgical interventions; 4) intensive chest and respiratory physiotherapy with routine application of expectorants; and 5) early active mobilization. A retrospective clinical study compared patients (group A) over a 2-year period admitted under the new protocol with a historical patient group (group B). Patients in group A (n = 38) had fewer ventilator days over the time-course of treatment (3 [1; 5.8] vs 18.5 days [0.5; 20.5]; P =.0001) with a lower rate of tracheostomies (15.8 vs 54%; P =.0003). Patients on ventilation at admission in group A had shorter ventilation periods after admission (4.75 [4; 22.25] vs 378 hours [8.5; 681.5]; P =.0003), and 66.7% of these patients were extubated within 6 hours of admission (vs 9.1% in group B). No patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria required re- or emergency intubation. In the first 5 days of treatment, significantly lower Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores were recorded in group A. There was also a trend for lower mortality rates (0 [0%] vs 6 [14%]), sepsis rates (24 [63.2%] vs 37 [88.1%]), and cumulative fluid balance on days 3 and 7 in group A. In contrast, group A demonstrated an elevated rate of pneumonia (15 [39.5%] vs 8 [19%]). These trends, however, lacked statistical significance. Our five-point protocol was safe and easily translated into clinical practice. In the authors experience, this protocol significantly reduced the ventilatory period in severely injured. Furthermore, this study suggests that many injured may be over-treated with routine ventilation, which carries accompanying risks.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e205-e212
JournalJournal of Burn Care and Research
Volume37
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - 2016
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

PubMed 25882516
ORCID /0000-0003-4633-2695/work/145698740

Keywords