BACKGROUND: Noncompressible abdominal bleeding is a significant cause of preventable death on the battlefield and in the civilian trauma environment, with no effective therapies available at point of injury. We previously described the development of a percutaneously administered, self-expanding, poly(urea)urethane foam that improved survival in a lethal Grade V hepatic and portal vein injury model in swine. In this study, we hypothesized that survival with foam treatment is dose dependent. METHODS: A high-grade hepatoportal injury was created in a closed abdominal cavity, resulting in massive noncompressible hemorrhage. After injury, the animals were divided into five groups. The control group (n = 12) was treated only with fluid resuscitation, and four polymer groups received different dose volumes (Group 1, n = 6, 64 mL; Group 2, n = 6, 85 mL; Group 3, n = 18, 100 mL; and Group 4, n = 10, 120 mL) in addition to fluids. Ten minutes after injury, the foam was percutaneously administered, and animals were monitored for 3 hours. RESULTS: Survival with hepatoportal injury was highest in Group 4 (90%) and decreased in a dose-dependent fashion (Group 3, 72%; Group 2, 33%; Group 1, 17%). All polymer groups survived significantly longer than the controls (8.3%). Hemorrhage rate was reduced in all groups but lowest in Group 4 versus the control group (0.34 [0.052] vs. 3.0 [1.3] mL/kg/min, p < 0.001). Increasing foam dose volume was associated with increased peak intra-abdominal pressure (88.2 [38.9] in Group 4 vs. 9.5 [3.2] in the controls, p < 0.0001) and increased incidence of focal bowel injuries. CONCLUSION: The self-expanding foam significantly improves survival in a dose-dependent fashion in an otherwise lethal injury. Higher doses are associated with better survival but resulted in the need for bowel resection.
BACKGROUND: Noncompressible abdominal bleeding is a significant cause of preventable death on the battlefield and in the civilian trauma environment, with no effective therapies available at point of injury. We previously described the development of a percutaneously administered, self-expanding, poly(urea)urethane foam that improved survival in a lethal Grade V hepatic and portal vein injury model in swine. In this study, we hypothesized that survival with foam treatment is dose dependent. METHODS: A high-grade hepatoportal injury was created in a closed abdominal cavity, resulting in massive noncompressible hemorrhage. After injury, the animals were divided into five groups. The control group (n = 12) was treated only with fluid resuscitation, and four polymer groups received different dose volumes (Group 1, n = 6, 64 mL; Group 2, n = 6, 85 mL; Group 3, n = 18, 100 mL; and Group 4, n = 10, 120 mL) in addition to fluids. Ten minutes after injury, the foam was percutaneously administered, and animals were monitored for 3 hours. RESULTS: Survival with hepatoportal injury was highest in Group 4 (90%) and decreased in a dose-dependent fashion (Group 3, 72%; Group 2, 33%; Group 1, 17%). All polymer groups survived significantly longer than the controls (8.3%). Hemorrhage rate was reduced in all groups but lowest in Group 4 versus the control group (0.34 [0.052] vs. 3.0 [1.3] mL/kg/min, p < 0.001). Increasing foam dose volume was associated with increased peak intra-abdominal pressure (88.2 [38.9] in Group 4 vs. 9.5 [3.2] in the controls, p < 0.0001) and increased incidence of focal bowel injuries. CONCLUSION: The self-expanding foam significantly improves survival in a dose-dependent fashion in an otherwise lethal injury. Higher doses are associated with better survival but resulted in the need for bowel resection.
Authors: Karthik Vishwanath; Rajan Gurjar; David Wolf; Suzannah Riccardi; Michael Duggan; David King Journal: Biomed Opt Express Date: 2018-01-11 Impact factor: 3.732
Authors: DaShawn A Hickman; Christa L Pawlowski; Ujjal D S Sekhon; Joyann Marks; Anirban Sen Gupta Journal: Adv Mater Date: 2017-11-22 Impact factor: 30.849
Authors: Andrew W Kirkpatrick; Homer Tien; Anthony T LaPorta; Kit Lavell; Jocelyn Keillor; Heather E Wright Beatty; Jessica Lynn McKee; Susan Brien; Derek J Roberts; Jonathan Wong; Chad G Ball; Andrew Beckett Journal: J Trauma Acute Care Surg Date: 2015-11 Impact factor: 3.313
Authors: Ujwal R Yanala; Jason M Johanning; Iraklis I Pipinos; Gustavo Larsen; William H Velander; Mark A Carlson Journal: PLoS One Date: 2014-09-24 Impact factor: 3.240