“…Patients with severe facial burns, those demonstrating signs or symptoms suggestive of inhalation injury, and those with large burns for which a significant resuscitation and associated edema are anticipated, are often preemptively intubated soon after injury to ensure airway protection and mechanical ventilatory support. Appropriate volume replacement in the burn patient can be very challenging, requiring that the practitioner provide adequate intravascular replacement, whereas simultaneously striving to avoid the potentially devastating complications associated with high-volume crystalloid resuscitation as noted by Chung et al 12 Primary and secondary trauma surveys of the combat injured often reveal multiple injuries, including multiple open soft tissue wounds, in addition to burn wounds. Many casualties are injured while traveling in a moving vehicle and need evaluation for blunt injury, as well as penetrating injury from an explosion.…”