| Literature DB >> 26338214 |
Ming Liang1, Jingjing Rong2, Jingyang Sun3, Tianming Yao4, Fengqi Xuan5, Lijun Zhao6, Fei Li7, Xiaozeng Wang8, Yaling Han9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Severely destructive disasters can often lead to heavy casualties. Large arterial injury in disasters, particularly, often results in high mortality and morbidity. Although minimally invasive intervention has achieved positive effects in diagnosing and treating vascular injuries, it is still unavailable at the disaster area of any country due to lack of on-spot catheterization labs. This study aimed to test the feasibility of adopting interventional techniques to treat haemorrhage of large arterial injuries in remote and austere wild environments after severely destructive disasters, by using a new mobile intervention suite we developed--the mobile minimally invasive interventional shelter (MIS).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26338214 PMCID: PMC4559303 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-015-0144-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1The vehicle-mounted state, self-unloading, unfolding and inner facilities of MIS. a. the appearance of unfolded MIS; b. the MIS was unloading; c. the unfolded MIS on flat ground; d. the internal facilities of MIS in working state
Fig. 2The angiography of normal abdominal aorta, aortic injury model and hemostasis after endovascular stent-graft exclusions. a. angiographic image of normal abdominal aorta; b. aortic injury model (white arrow shows the injury site and red arrow shows the retention of contrast agent); c. stent graft at the landing zone where the lesion was covered; d. successful endovascular stent-graft exclusions and hemostasis (yellow arrow shows the stent graft and hemorrhage is under control)
Fig. 3The angiography of normal femoral artery and arterial injury model. a. angiographic image of normal femoral artery; b. arterial injury model (white arrow shows the injury site and red arrow shows the retention of contrast agent)
Fig. 4Temporary balloon occlusion combined with surgical hemostasis. a. successful balloon occlusion of the injured femoral artery (yellow arrow shows the balloon and hemorrhage is under control); b. The injured branch of femoral artery was ligated after temporary balloon occlusion; c. angiographic image after surgical hemostasis and balloon withdrawal (blue arrow shows the stump of injured femoral arterial branch after ligation)
Hemodynamics of Endovascular stent-graft exclusion experiment (n=5)
| Hemodynamic parameters | Before modeling establishment | After modeling establishment | Post-operation |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBP(mmHg) | 178.4±13.6 | 181.5±19.7 | 183.5±17.3 |
| DBP(mmHg) | 131.2±12.3 | 136.5±17.2 | 133.3±14.1 |
| Heart rate(bmp) | 125±10.7 | 137±21* | 128±15.4 |
* p<0.05, the difference was significant when compared with the value of before modeling establishment.
SBP systolic blood pressure; DBP diastolic blood pressure
Hemodynamics of Balloon occlusion experiment (n=5)
| Hemodynamic parameters | Before modeling establish | After modeling establish | Post-operation |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBP(mmHg) | 181.6±13.8 | 186.4±16. 8 | 184.9±15.2 |
| DBP(mmHg) | 135.2±11.9 | 138.7±16.5 | 138.3±14.1 |
| Heart rate(bmp) | 121±14.3 | 122±17.7 | 118±12.4 |
SBP systolic blood pressure; DBP: diastolic blood pressure