Treatment of the lung injury of drowning: a systematic review
by Ogilvie Thom, Kym Roberts, Susan Devine, Peter A. Leggat
and Richard C. Franklin
Critical Care volume 25,
Article number: 253, Published: 19
July 2021
Background
Drowning is a cause of significant global mortality. The
mechanism of injury involves inhalation of water, lung injury and hypoxia. This
systematic review addressed the following question: In drowning patients with
lung injury, what is the evidence from primary studies regarding treatment
strategies and subsequent patient outcomes?
Methods
The search strategy utilised PRISMA guidelines. Databases
searched were MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science and SCOPUS. There were no
restrictions on publication date or age of participants. Quality of evidence
was evaluated using GRADE methodology.
Results
Forty-one papers were included. The quality of evidence was
very low. Seventeen papers addressed the lung injury of drowning in their
research question and 24 had less specific research questions, however included
relevant outcome data. There were 21 studies regarding extra-corporeal life
support, 14 papers covering the theme of ventilation strategies, 14 addressed
antibiotic use, seven papers addressed steroid use and five studies
investigating diuretic use. There were no clinical trials. One retrospective
comparison of therapeutic strategies was found. There was insufficient evidence
to make recommendations as to best practice when supplemental oxygen alone is
insufficient. Mechanical ventilation is associated with barotrauma in drowning
patients, but the evidence predates the practice of lung protective
ventilation. There was insufficient evidence to make recommendations regarding
adjuvant therapies.
Conclusions
Treating the lung injury of drowning has a limited
evidentiary basis. There is an urgent need for comparative studies of
therapeutic strategies in drowning.
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