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. 2020 Mar 25;9(4):894. doi: 10.3390/jcm9040894

Table 1.

Demographic and baseline characteristics and clinical outcomes.

Heparin
N = 7
Placebo
N = 6
p
Age 67 (59–81) 51 (40–61) 0.08
Gender, male 4 4 0.73
TBSA % 12 (1–23) 3 (1–44) 0.88
ABSI 7 (6–9) 6 (5–10) 1.0
Inhalation injury score 0.62
Clinical a 4 (2–4) 3 (3–5)
Bronchoscopic b 1 (1–2) 1 (1–3) 0.83
SAPS II 51 (37–65) 56 (42–72) 0.83
LIS c on ICU admission day 1.5 (1–2.3) 1.5 (1–1.8) 0.84
APTT on ICU admission day 34 (27–43) 31 (27–38) 0.51
Ventilator-free days and alive at day 28 16 (4–24) 20 (7–24) 0.62
ICU-free days and alive at day 90 71 (0–75) 49 (3–82) 0.73
ARDS, N - 1 -
Pneumonia, N 2 1 -
Burn wound infection, N - 1 -

Data as median (95% interquartile range): There were no statistically significant differences between groups. Abbreviations. ABSI: abbreviated burn severity index. APTT: activated partial thromboplastin time. ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome. LIS: lung injury score. N: number. SAPS II: Simplified Acute Physiology Score. TBSA: total body surface area. ICU: Intensive Care Unit. a Clinical scoring of inhalation injury: A score consisting of 7 clinical factors was considered to be suggestive for inhalation injury. One-point-each diagnosis of smoke inhalation is fulfilled with a score > 2. In brief, 1. trapped during a fire in an enclosed space, 2. carbonaceous sputum, 3. altered level of consciousness, 3. mild respiratory distress, 4. serious respiratory distress, and 7. hoarseness or loss of voice. b Grading of inhalation injury by bronchoscopic criteria (0 = no injury; 1 = mild injury; 2 = moderate injury; 3 = severe injury; and 4 = massive injury). c Scoring based on chest X-ray findings, PaO2/FiO2, Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP) level, and respiratory compliance. A score < 2.5 indicates mild-to-moderate lung injury, and ≥ 2.5 indicates severe lung injury.