Literature DB >> 11074889

Feasibility of damage control surgery in the management of military combat casualties.

B Eiseman1, E E Moore, D R Meldrum, C Raeburn.   

Abstract

Unique and expanded applications of staged operative management are undergoing careful evaluation in many civilian level I trauma centers under the rubric of damage control surgery. Recently there have been advocates for its broad application to the early management of critically injured combat casualties. However, the enormous logistic requirements for such strategies are contrary to the demands of the usual wartime scenario. On the basis of experience in civilian trauma centers and combat casualty management, we question the suggested extensive role of damage control surgery during wartime. Each decision point in damage control surgery should be analyzed as it is altered (sensitivity analysis) by conditions of war. It is unwise to adopt such indications unchanged from current civilian trauma policy.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11074889     DOI: 10.1001/archsurg.135.11.1323

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


  4 in total

Review 1.  Combat surgery: Status of tactical abbreviated surgical control.

Authors:  Pankaj P Rao; D V Singh
Journal:  Med J Armed Forces India       Date:  2017-07-25

2.  An outcome prediction model for exsanguinating patients with blunt abdominal trauma after damage control laparotomy: a retrospective study.

Authors:  Shang-Yu Wang; Chien-Hung Liao; Chih-Yuan Fu; Shih-Ching Kang; Chun-Hsiang Ouyang; I-Ming Kuo; Jr-Rung Lin; Yu-Pao Hsu; Chun-Nan Yeh; Shao-Wei Chen
Journal:  BMC Surg       Date:  2014-04-28       Impact factor: 2.102

3.  The Libyan civil conflict: selected case series of orthopaedic trauma managed in Malta in 2014.

Authors:  Colin Ng; Max Mifsud; Joseph N Borg; Colin Mizzi
Journal:  Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med       Date:  2015-11-20       Impact factor: 2.953

4.  Injury patterns and causes of death in 953 patients with penetrating abdominal war wounds in a civilian independent non-governmental organization hospital in Lashkargah, Afghanistan.

Authors:  Maurizio Cardi; Khushal Ibrahim; Shah Wali Alizai; Hamayoun Mohammad; Marco Garatti; Antonio Rainone; Francesco Di Marzo; Giuseppe La Torre; Michela Paschetto; Ludovica Carbonari; Valentina Mingarelli; Andrea Mingoli; Giuseppe S Sica; Simone Sibio
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2019-11-21       Impact factor: 5.469

  4 in total

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