Literature DB >> 25159245

Survival of pediatric blunt trauma patients presenting with no signs of life in the field.

Vincent Duron1, Rita V Burke, David Bliss, Henri R Ford, Jeffrey S Upperman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prehospital traumatic cardiopulmonary arrest is associated with dismal prognosis, and patients rarely survive to hospital discharge. Recently established guidelines do not apply to the pediatric population because of paucity of data. The study objective was to determine the survival of pediatric patients presenting in the field with no signs of life after blunt trauma.
METHODS: We conducted a retrospective analysis of the National Trauma Data Bank research data set (2002-2010). All patients 18 years and younger with blunt traumatic injuries were identified (DRG International Classification of Diseases-9th Rev. codes 800-869). No signs of life (SOL) was defined on physical examination findings and included the following: pulse, 0; respiratory rate, 0; systolic blood pressure, 0; and no evidence of neurologic activity. These same criteria were reassessed on arrival at the emergency department (ED). Furthermore, we examined patients presenting to the ED who underwent resuscitative thoracotomy (Current Procedural Terminology code 34.02). Our primary outcome was survival to discharge from the hospital.
RESULTS: There were a total of 3,115,597 pediatric patients who were found in the field after experiencing blunt trauma. Of those, 7,766 (0.25%) had no SOL. Seventy percent of the patients with no SOL in the field were male. Survival to hospital discharge of all patients presenting with no SOL was 4.4% (n = 340). Twenty-five percent of the patients in the field with no SOL were successfully resuscitated in the field and regained SOL by the time they arrived to the ED (n = 1,913). Of those patients who regained SOL, 13.8% (n = 265) survived to hospital discharge. For patients in the field with no SOL, survival to discharge was significantly higher in patients who did not receive a resuscitative thoracotomy than in those who did.
CONCLUSION: Survival of pediatric blunt trauma patients in the field without SOL is dismal. Resuscitative thoracotomy poses a heightened risk of blood-borne pathogen exposure to involved health care workers and is associated with a significantly lower survival rate. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic study, level III; therapeutic study, level IV.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25159245     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000000394

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg        ISSN: 2163-0755            Impact factor:   3.313


  3 in total

Review 1.  Survival after emergency department thoracotomy in the pediatric trauma population: a review of published data.

Authors:  Eliza E Moskowitz; Clay Cothren Burlew; Ann M Kulungowski; Denis D Bensard
Journal:  Pediatr Surg Int       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 1.827

2.  Impact of Different Initial Epinephrine Treatment Time Points on the Early Postresuscitative Hemodynamic Status of Children With Traumatic Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest.

Authors:  Yan-Ren Lin; Yuan-Jhen Syue; Waradee Buddhakosai; Huai-En Lu; Chin-Fu Chang; Chih-Yu Chang; Cheng Hsu Chen; Wen-Liang Chen; Chao-Jui Li
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 1.889

3.  Emergency clamshell thoracotomy in blunt trauma resuscitation: Shelling the paradigm-2 cases and review of the literature.

Authors:  Patrick Schober; Marcel A de Leeuw; Maartje Terra; Stephan A Loer; Lothar A Schwarte
Journal:  Clin Case Rep       Date:  2018-06-19
  3 in total

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