An unusual pediatric case of an insidious thermal airway injury without initial signs of facial or intraoral scalding.
Ayaka OhashiDaisuke MatsubaraYoshitaka MizobeTadahiro MitaniMarika OnoMiki NozawaMakoto ItoToshihiro TajimaHitoshi OsakaPublished in: Journal of burn care & research : official publication of the American Burn Association (2024)
Thermal airway injuries, usually accompanied by facial burns, require emergency management. We encountered a pediatric case of a late airway-scalding injury without any initial signs of scalding on the face or inside the oral cavity. A 16-month-old boy was accidentally exposed to boiling water from overhead and developed tachypnea and dyspnea at 8 h after the injury. When he visited our hospital at 12 h after the injury, there were no scalding-related findings on his face or inside his oral cavity; however, severe laryngeal edema was observed, which required emergency intubation. Thermal airway injuries can occur later, even if there is no evidence of facial or oral scalding immediately after the injury. Airway injuries should be considered when a patient has been exposed to hot water from overhead.