| Literature DB >> 26437974 |
Javad Motaharinia1, Farhad Etezadi2, Azadeh Moghaddas3, Mojtaba Mojtahedzadeh4.
Abstract
Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) and nosocomial infection following trauma-hemorrhage are among the most important causes of mortality in hemorrhagic shock patients. Dysregulation of the immune system plays a central role in MODS and a fluid having an immunomodulatory effect could be advantageous in hemorrhagic shock resuscitation. Hypertonic saline (HS) is widely used as a resuscitation fluid in trauma-hemorrhagic patients. Besides having beneficial effects on the hemodynamic parameters, HS has modulatory effects on various functions of immune cells such as degranulation, adhesion molecules and cytokines expression, as well as reactive oxygen species production. This article reviews clinical evidence for decreased organ failure and mortality in hemorrhagic shock patients resuscitated with HS. Despite promising results in animal models, results from pre-hospital and emergency department administration in human studies did not show improvement in survival, organ failure, or a reduction in nosocomial infection by HS resuscitation. Further post hoc analysis showed some benefit from HS resuscitation for severely-injured patients, those who received more than ten units of blood by transfusion, patients who underwent surgery, and victims of traumatic brain injury. Several reasons are suggested to explain the differences between clinical and animal models.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26437974 PMCID: PMC4593217 DOI: 10.1186/s40199-015-0130-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Daru ISSN: 1560-8115 Impact factor: 3.117
Prospective double-blinded randomized clinical trials on HS or HSD resuscitation in hemorrhagic shock patients
| Study | Population | Resuscitation fluid | End point | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 20 pre-hospital trauma patients with SBP ≤ 100 mmHg | HSD or LR | Survival to hospital discharge and hemodynamic variables | Improved SBP and overall survival rate. |
| [ | 32 trauma patients with a SBP < 80 mm Hg admitted to ED | HSD or LR | Survival to hospital discharge and hemodynamic variables | There were no differences in survival rate. |
| [ | 106 trauma patients with SBP <80 mm Hg for 6 % HSD or < 90 mmHg for HS and were 18 years or older admitted to ED | HS or HSD or LR | Survival to hospital discharge and hemodynamic variables | There were no differences in overall survival between any of the groups. |
| [ | 422 pre-hospital trauma patients ≥ 16 years with SBP ≤ 90 mmHg 72 % of participants had sustained penetrating trauma | HSD or LR | Primary end points included: survival at 24 h and 30 days (if possible). Secondary end points included: complications and safety of HSD | In the HSD 6 % group which requiring surgery: there was a significant treatment effect in favor of HSD 6 % ( |
| [ | 166 pre-hospital trauma patients with SBP ≤ 90 mmHg | HSD or LR | Survival to hospital discharge and hemodynamic variables | There was no difference in overall survival and there is a trend to improve survival in patients with severe head injuries. |
| [ | 105 trauma patients ≥ 18 years with SBP < 80 mm Hg admitted to ED | HSD or HS or NS | Survival to hospital discharge, hemodynamic variables | There were no significant differences in overall complication and mortality rates in the three groups. |
| [ | 194 pre-hospital trauma patients with SBP < 90 mm | HSD or HS or LR | Survival to hospital discharge, hemodynamics variables, MTOS and neurological outcome scores | Overall survival in the four treatment groups was not statistically significant. Survival in the hypertonic group, however, was significantly higher than that predicted by the MTOS norms. The survival rate in the HS group was higher than that in the LR group for the cohort with baseline Glasgow Coma Scale scores of 8 or less ( |
| [ | 258 pre-hospital trauma patients with SBP < 90 mm Hg. | HSD or HS or NS | Survival to hospital discharge, hemodynamics variables, MTOS and neurological outcome scores | There were no differences in overall survival. Improved survival vs. predicted MTOS in high-risk HS & HSD 6 % patients, HS patient with GCS 8 or less and HSD 6 % patients with unobtainable BP at the time of randomization. |
| [ | 212 hypovolemic shock patients admitted to ED | HSD or NS | Survival at 24 h and 30 days and complications | The 24 h survival rate was significantly higher in HSD 6 % (87 %) compared with NS (72 %) ( |
| [ | 209 pre-hospital blunt trauma patients with SBP ≤90 mm Hg “The study was stopped for futility after the second interim analyses.” | HSD or LR | Primary outcome was 28 day ARDS-free survival. Secondary outcome; nosocomial infection, multiple organ failure syndrome | There was no significant difference in ARDS-free survival. There was an improved in ARDS-free survival in the patients (19 % of the population) requiring 10 U or more of packed RBC in the first 24 h. (HR, 2.18; 95 % CI, 1.09–4.36). |
| [ | 853 pre-hospital hypovolemic shock patients with SBP ≤ 70 mm Hg or SBP ≈ 71–90 mm Hg with HR equal or higher than 108 beats per minute. (62 % of patients were with blunt trauma.) . “The study was stopped early (23 % of proposed sample size) for futility and potential safety concern.” | HSD or HS or NS | Primary outcome was 28 day survival. Secondary outcomes included: fluid and blood requirements in the first 24 h, physiologic parameters of organ dysfunction, 28 day ARDS–free survival, multiple organ dysfunction score and nosocomial infections | There was no significant difference in 28 day survival between treatment groups. There was a higher mortality for the post-randomization subgroup of patients who did not receive blood transfusions in the first 24 h, who received hypertonic fluids compared to NS ( |
HSD dextran 70 in HS. HS hypertonic saline 7.5 %. NS 0.9 % saline. LR ringer’s lactate. SBP systolic blood pressure. MAP mean arterial pressure. MTOS major trauma outcome study. BP blood pressure. RTS revised trauma score. ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome. CI confidence interval. HR hazard ratio. RBC red blood cells. HR heart rate. RCT randomized clinical study. ED emergency department