| Literature DB >> 28058475 |
Robert Wise1,2,3, Michael Faurie4, Manu L N G Malbrain5, Eric Hodgson6,7.
Abstract
Intravenous fluid management of trauma patients is fraught with complex decisions that are often complicated by coagulopathy and blood loss. This review discusses the fluid management in trauma patients from the perspective of the developing world. In addition, the article describes an approach to specific circumstances in trauma fluid decision-making and provides recommendations for the resource-limited environment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28058475 PMCID: PMC5394148 DOI: 10.1007/s00268-016-3865-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg ISSN: 0364-2313 Impact factor: 3.352
Fig. 1Flow diagram of initial fluid resuscitation of trauma patients
Thromboelastometry interpretation and action guide
| Laboratory value | Interpretation | Blood product transfusion |
|---|---|---|
|
| Enzymatic hypercoagulability | Do not treat if bleeding |
|
| Low clotting factors | FDP/FFP’s and RBC’s |
| Alpha angle >45 degrees | Low fibrinogen levels | Cryoprecipitate/fibrinogen/platelets |
| MA <54 mm | Low platelet function | Platelets/cryoprecipitate/fibrinogen |
| MA >73 mm | Platelet hypercoagulability | Do not treat if bleeding |
| LY30 >3% | Primary fibrinolysis | Tranexamic acid 1 g IV over 10 min then 1 g/250 ml NS over 8 h |
| CI <1.0 |
FDP freeze-dried plasma, FFP fresh-frozen plasma, RBC red blood cell
Fig. 2Thromboelastometry—differences in measurement between ROTEM and thromboelastography [42]
ROSE concept (adapted from Malbrain et al. with permission) [40]
| Resuscitation phase ( |
| Salvage or rescue treatment with fluids administered quickly as a bolus (4 mL/kg over 10–15 min) |
| The goal is early adequate goal-directed fluid management (EAFM), fluid balance must be positive, and the suggested resuscitation targets are: MAP > 65 mm Hg, CI > 2.5 L/min/m2, PPV < 12%, LVEDAI > 8 cm/m2 |
| Optimization phase ( |
| Occurs within hours |
| Ischemia and reperfusion |
| Degree of positive fluid balance may be a marker of severity in this phase |
| Risk of polycompartment syndrome |
| Unstable, compensated shock state requiring titrating of fluids to cardiac output |
| Targets: MAP > 65 mm Hg, CI > 2.5 L/min/m2, PPV < 14%, LVEDAI 8−12 cm/m2, IAP (<15 mm Hg) are monitored, and APP (>55 mm Hg) is calculated. Preload optimized with GEDVI 640—800 mL/m2 |
| Stabilization phase ( |
| Evolves over days |
| Fluid therapy only for normal maintenance and replacement |
| Absence of shock or threat of shock |
| Monitor daily body weight, fluid balance and organ function |
| Targets: neutral or negative fluid balance; EVLWI < 10−12 mL/kg PBW, PVPI < 2.5, IAP < 15 mm Hg, APP > 55 mm Hg, COP > 16−18 mm Hg and CLI < 60 |
| Evacuation phase ( |
| Patients who do not transition from the “ebb” phase of shock to the “flow” phase after the “second hit” develop global increased permeability syndrome (GIPS) |
| Fluid overload causes end-organ dysfunction |
| Requires late goal-directed fluid removal (“de-resuscitation”) to achieve negative fluid balance |
| Need to avoid over-enthusiastic fluid removal resulting in hypovolemia |
Representation of how to use creatine kinase as a surrogate marker for myoglobin
| CK U/l | Risk of renal failure | Admission |
|---|---|---|
| <500 | Low | Unlikely |
| 500–5000 | Intermediate | At least overnight |
| >5000U/l | High | Admission to ICU/high care |