Introduction: Inhalation injury is a major risk factor for mortality in burn patients via 3 primary mechanisms: airway edema and obstruction, hypoxemic respiratory failure, and pneumonia. Currently, the mainstay of treatment is supportive care to include early intubation, lung-protective or high-frequency-percussive mechanical ventilation, nebulized heparin, and aggressive pulmonary toilet. Despite these treatments, a subset of these patients progress to severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) for which rescue options are limited.
Case presentation: A 31-year-old woman was found down in a house fire. On admission to the burn intensive care unit, she was diagnosed with grade 3 smoke inhalation injury. Cutaneous thermal injury was absent. By hospital day 2, she developed worsening hypoxemia and hypercapnia despite maximal ventilatory support. She was placed on veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). She received an average of 2.2 hours of direct rehabilitation a day and completed out-of-bed modalities over 90% of total hospital days. After 159 hours, she was decannulated, and by hospital day 18, she was discharged home on supplemental oxygen.
Conclusion: Current literature regarding ECMO in inhalation injury is limited, but a growing body of evidence suggests that treatment of severe smoke inhalation injury should include ECMO for those who fail conventional therapy.
Keywords: acute respiratory distress syndrome; extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; high-frequency percussive ventilation; smoke inhalation injury.
Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Burn Association 2024.