Cimetidine Therapy for Burn Shock: A Quantitative Assessment

    loading  Checking for direct PDF access through Ovid

Abstract

Optimal cardiac output (CO) resuscitation for severely burned guinea pigs is obtained with intravenous volumes of lactated Ringer's (LR) calculated at 4 cc/kg/%burn/24 hr. When one half this volume of LR is given (2 cc/kg/%burn/24 hr) CO is significantly (p < 0.05) reduced at 2, 4, and 8 hours after injury. When early postburn cimetidine therapy (0.5 hours after injury) is added to only 1 cc/kg/%burn/24 hr LR, CO is significantly elevated for the same time periods and is not significantly different from CO values of LR at 4 cc/kg/%burn/24 hr for the first 24 hours after injury. However, postburn cimetidine therapy delayed until 1 hour after burn injury did not improve CO compared to treatment with LR at 2 cc/kg/%burn/24 hr. These observations suggest that early postburn cimetidine therapy administered within 1/2-hour of severe scald injury will result in significant CO improvement while simultaneously reducing resuscitative fluid volume requirements by as much as 70% for the first 24 hours after injury.

    loading  Loading Related Articles