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The Morphology of Smoke Inhalation Injury in Sheep

Authors :
ARMY INST OF SURGICAL RESEARCH FORT SAMHOUSTON TX
Hubbard, Gene B.
Langlinais, Paulette C.
Shimazu, Takeshi
Okerberg, Carlin V.
Mason, Arthur D.
ARMY INST OF SURGICAL RESEARCH FORT SAMHOUSTON TX
Hubbard, Gene B.
Langlinais, Paulette C.
Shimazu, Takeshi
Okerberg, Carlin V.
Mason, Arthur D.
Source :
DTIC AND NTIS
Publication Year :
1991

Abstract

Pulmonary injury resulting from inhalation of chemical and particulate products of incomplete combustion is one of the principal determinants of mortality following burn injury. In this study, the histopathology of inhalation injury was examined in sheep. Mild, moderate, or severe smoke injury was produced in anesthetized sheep by insufflation with various doses of ambient temperature smoke, generated by burning polyethylene, wood pulp, and nonwoven cellulose pads. A total of 64 sheep were exposed and evaluated at times ranging from 15 minutes to 4 weeks after exposure. Morphologic changes in the lungs were studied using light microscopy and both transmission and scanning electron microscopy. The primary, dose-responsive injury observed was acute cell membrane damage in the trachea and bronchi leading to edema, progressive necrotic tracheobronchitis with pseudomembrane formation, and airway obstruction. These inflammatory and occlusive effects were followed by congestion, alveolar space edema, atelectasis, and bronchopneumonia. Morphologic changes occurring in the alveolar epithelium following high smoke dosage included intracellular edema in type-I cells, changes in the membrane- bound vacuoles of type-11 cells, and septal thickening caused by interstitial edema. No capillary endothelial changes were observed.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
DTIC AND NTIS
Notes :
text/html, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn831712852
Document Type :
Electronic Resource