J Trauma
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
A prospective study of prophylactic penicillin in acutely burned hospitalized patients.
The use of prophylactic low-dose penicillin acutely burned, hospitalized patients remains controversial. Fifty-one adult patients with burns of 1% to 91% total body surface area were prospectively studied to determine the efficacy of prophylactic penicillin in the prevention of wound cellulitis and burn wound sepsis, and to examine the influence of prophylactic penicillin on the emergence of antibiotic resistant microorganisms. ⋯ No patient in either group developed gentamicin-resistant Gram-negative organisms, although the gastrointestinal tracts of two patients in the penicillin group showed new colonization by yeast. We conclude that the routine administration of prophylactic penicillin neither protects against cellulitis and burn wound sepsis, nor promotes selection of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in hospitalized patients with acute thermal injury.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Prospective trials of dexamethasone and aerosolized gentamicin in the treatment of inhalation injury in the burned patient.
The addition of an inhalation injury to a cutaneous burn results in a significant increase in patient mortality rates, both from early pulmonary edema and, later, Gram-negative pneumonitis. Steroids have been shown to decrease mortality in an inhalation injury model. Aerosolization of gentamicin has been used successfully to treat severe bronchial infections. ⋯ Both drug-treated groups were comparable to their controls in age and mean burn size. Results of the steroid trial showed no major differences in mortality, pulmonary complications, or changes in pulmonary functions. Results of the gentamicin trial showed no major differences in mortality, time of death, or pulmonary and septic complications between treated and control groups.