4.0 Article

Adults with well-healed burn injuries have lower pulmonary function values decades after injury

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.14814/phy2.15264

Keywords

body surface area; inhalation injury; lung diffusing capacity; lung volumes; spirometry

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM068865, R01AG069005, F32HL154559, F32GM117693]
  2. Department of Defense [W81XWH-15-1-0647]
  3. NIH Administrative Supplements to Promote Diversity in Health-Related Research
  4. American Physiological Society Postdoctoral Fellowship

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Sub-acute and/or acute insults sustained during a severe burn injury impair pulmonary function. This study found that adults with well-healed burn injuries have lower pulmonary function decades after injury. Future research should focus on rehabilitation strategies to improve pulmonary function among adults with well-healed burn injuries.
Sub-acute (e.g., inhalation injury) and/or acute insults sustained during a severe burn injury impairs pulmonary function. However, previous work has not fully characterized pulmonary function in adults with well-healed burn injuries decades after an injury. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that adults with well-healed burn injuries have lower pulmonary function years after recovery. Our cohort of adults with well-healed burn-injuries (n = 41) had a lower forced expiratory volume in one second (Burn: 93 +/- 16 vs. Control: 103 +/- 10%predicted, mean +/- SD; d = 0.60, p = 0.04), lower maximal voluntary ventilation (Burn: 84 [71-97] vs. Control: 105 [94-122] %predicted, median [IQR]; d = 0.84, p < 0.01), and a higher specific airway resistance (Burn: 235 +/- 80 vs. Control: 179 +/- 40%predieted, mean +/- SD; d = 0.66, p = 0.02) than non-burned control participants (n = 12). No variables were meaningfully influenced by having a previous inhalation injury (d <= 0.44, p >= 0.19; 13 of 41 had an inhalation injury), the size of the body surface area burned (R-2 <= 0.06, p >= 0.15; range of 15%-88% body surface area burned), or the time since the burn injury (R-2 <= 0.04, p >= 0.22: range of 2-50 years post-injury). These data suggest that adults with well-healed burn injuries have lower pulmonary function decades after injury. Therefore. future research should examine rehabilitation strategies that could improve pulmonary function among adults with well-healed burn injuries.

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