Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

Coda Change


Aug 28, 2018

Haemostatic resuscitation of haemorrhagic shock by Wolfgang Voelckel Haemostatic resuscitation of haemorrhagic shock is an area great leaps forward can be made, as Wolfgang Voelckel discusses. Exsanguination and brain injury are the leading causes of death after major trauma. During the last decades, significant progress has been made in the fight against haemorrhage. Nevertheless, the window of opportunity is still small and the golden hour of shock more fiction than fact. Hence, the majority of trauma patients are still lost on the street and during the first hour after hospital admission. Moreover, trauma is an increasing epidemiologic burden worldwide. Pre-hospital emergency care plays an essential role when distances are long and immediate damage control is key. Since evidence of established interventions (such as fluid resuscitation and vasopressor use) is spare, Wolfgang presents his summary of currently available trauma care guidelines. Through this his team has collaborated best practice advice for massive bleeding comprising a five-step approach. First - Identification, on-going monitoring, and appropriate notification of the receiving hospital. Second - Control of haemorrhage by tourniquets and pelvic splints; and advanced interventions, such as emergency resuscitative thoracotomy and resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion. Third - Target controlled fluid resuscitation within the concept of hypotensive resuscitation in order to prevent hypovolemic cardiac arrest during the pre-hospital phase. Fourth - Pharmacologic interventions employing vasopressor drugs and medication for coagulation management. Fifth - Avoiding mistakes in anesthetised and ventilated patients with critical intravascular volume status, as well as means to counteract inadvertent hypothermia. Finally -  A minimum data set allowing retrospective analysis and system comparison is needed. In conclusion, code red protocols are key in order to reduce pre-hospital care to the max and to pave the way to major trauma care. Current concepts of trauma care with a strong focus on the C-ABC (Circulation-Airway-Breathing-Circulation) approach, hypotensive resuscitation, haemostatic resuscitation, and damage control surgery improve survival after major trauma.

For more like this, head to https://codachange.org/podcasts/