Literature DB >> 10843365

Blunt trauma resuscitation: the old can respond.

B A McKinley1, R G Marvin, C S Cocanour, A Marquez, D N Ware, F A Moore.   

Abstract

HYPOTHESIS: Old and young trauma patients are capable of hyperdynamic response during standardized shock resuscitation.
DESIGN: The responses of old and young trauma patients resuscitated using a standardized protocol are compared in an inception cohort study. A standardized resuscitation protocol was used to attain and maintain an oxygen delivery index of 600 mL/min x m2 or greater (DO2I > or = 600) for the first 24 hours in the intensive care unit. Interventions, responses, and outcomes for old (> or = 65 years) and young (<65 years) patients are described. Data were analyzed using analysis of variance, the chi2 test, and the t test; P<.05 was considered significant.
SETTING: A 20-bed shock trauma intensive care unit in a regional level I trauma center. PATIENTS: Patients at high risk of postinjury multiple organ failure, ie, major organ or vascular injury and/or skeletal fractures, initial base deficit of 6 mEq/L or greater, need for 6 units or more of packed red blood cells in the first 12 hours, or age of 65 years or older with any 2 previous criteria.
INTERVENTIONS: Pulmonary artery catheter, crystalloid fluid infusion, packed red blood cell transfusion, and moderate inotrope support, as needed in that sequence, to attain DO2I > or = 600. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Intensive care unit length of stay and survival.
RESULTS: During 19 months ending June 1999, 12 old patients (58% male; age, 76 +/- 2 years [mean +/- SEM] [P<.0011; Injury Severity Score, 20 +/- 2 [P=.02]) and 54 young patients (61% male; age, 37 +/- 2 years; Injury Severity Score, 32 +/- 2) were resuscitated. Initially, for old patients (cardiac index, 2.0 +/- 0.2 L/min x m2) and for young patients (cardiac index, 3.0 +/- 0.2 L/min x m2; P=.01), 24-hour volumes were as follows: 16 +/- 3 L of crystalloid and 12 +/- 3 units of packed red blood cells for the old patients and 21 +/- 2 L of crystalloid and 19 +/- 2 units of packed red blood cells for the young patients. For old patients, 9 (75%) attained DO2I > or = 600, and 11 (92%) survived 7 or more days and 5 (42%) 30 or more days. For young patients, 45 (83%) attained the DO2I goal, and 48 (89%) survived 30 or more days. Intensive care unit length of stay was 25 +/- 9 days for the old patients and 23 +/- 2 days for the young patients.
CONCLUSIONS: Elderly patients have initially depressed cardiac index but generate hyperdynamic response. Although ultimate outcome is poorer than in the younger cohort, resuscitation is not futile.

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Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10843365     DOI: 10.1001/archsurg.135.6.688

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Surg        ISSN: 0004-0010


  8 in total

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3.  Polytrauma in the Geriatric Population: Analysis of Outcomes for Surgically Treated Multiple Fractures with a Minimum 2 Years of Follow-Up.

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4.  Performance of a computerized protocol for trauma shock resuscitation.

Authors:  Joseph F Sucher; Frederick A Moore; R Matthew Sailors; Ernest A Gonzalez; Bruce A McKinley
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5.  In search of benchmarking for mortality following multiple trauma: a Swiss trauma center experience.

Authors:  Ida Füglistaler-Montali; Corinna Attenberger; Philipp Füglistaler; Augustinus L Jacob; Felix Amsler; Thomas Gross
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6.  Do not resuscitate status, not age, affects outcomes after injury: an evaluation of 15,227 consecutive trauma patients.

Authors:  Sasha D Adams; Bryan A Cotton; Charles E Wade; Rosemary A Kozar; Edmundo Dipasupil; Jeanette M Podbielski; Brijesh S Gill; James R Duke; Philip R Adams; John B Holcomb
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7.  Older Age, Comorbid Illnesses, and Injury Severity Affect Immediate Outcome in Elderly Trauma Patients.

Authors:  Dvora Kirshenbom; Zila Ben-Zaken; Nehama Albilya; Eva Niyibizi; Miklosh Bala
Journal:  J Emerg Trauma Shock       Date:  2017 Jul-Sep

8.  Retrospective Analysis of Geriatric Major Trauma Patients Admitted in the Shock Room of a Swiss Academic Hospital: Characteristics and Prognosis.

Authors:  Monica Pagin; Cédric Mabire; Michael Cotton; Tobias Zingg; Pierre-Nicolas Carron
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  8 in total

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