| Literature DB >> 32130669 |
Federico Coccolini1, Marco Ceresoli2, David T McGreevy3, Mitra Sadeghi4, Artai Pirouzram3, Asko Toivola3, Per Skoog5, Koji Idoguchi6, Yuri Kon7, Tokiya Ishida8, Yosuke Matsumura9,10, Junichi Matsumoto11, Viktor Reva12,13, Mariusz Maszkowski4, Paola Fugazzola2, Matteo Tomasoni2, Enrico Cicuttin2, Luca Ansaloni2, Claudia Zaghi2, Maria Grazia Sibilla2, Camilla Cremonini14, Adam Bersztel4, Eva-Corina Caragounis15, Mårten Falkenberg16, Lauri Handolin17, George Oosthuizen18, Endre Szarka19, Vassil Manchev18, Tongporn Wannatoop19, Sung Wook Chang20, Boris Kessel21, Dan Hebron21, Gad Shaked22, Miklosh Bala23, Carlos A Ordoñez24, Peter Hibert-Carius25, Massimo Chiarugi14, Kristofer F Nilsson3, Thomas Larzon3, Emiliano Gamberini26, Vanni Agnoletti26, Fausto Catena27, Tal M Hörer2.
Abstract
EndoVascular and Hybrid Trauma Management (EVTM) has been recently introduced in the treatment of severe pelvic ring injuries. This multimodal method of hemorrhage management counts on several strategies such as the REBOA (resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta). Few data exist on the use of REBOA in patients with a severely injured pelvic ring. The ABO (aortic balloon occlusion) Trauma Registry is designed to capture data for all trauma patients in hemorrhagic shock where management includes REBOA placement. Among all patients included in the ABO registry, 72 patients presented with severe pelvic injuries and were the population under exam. 66.7% were male. Mean and median ISS were respectively 43 and 41 (SD ± 13). Isolated pelvic injuries were observed in 12 patients (16.7%). Blunt trauma occurred in 68 patients (94.4%), penetrating in 2 (2.8%) and combined in 2 (2.8%). Type of injury: fall from height in 15 patients (23.1%), traffic accident in 49 patients (75.4%), and unspecified impact in 1 patient (1.5%). Femoral access was gained pre-hospital in 1 patient, in emergency room in 43, in operating room in 12 and in angio-suite in 16. REBOA was positioned in zone 1 in 59 patients (81,9%), in zone 2 in 1 (1,4%) and in zone 3 in 12 (16,7%). Aortic occlusion was partial/periodical in 35 patients (48,6%) and total occlusion in 37 patients (51,4%). REBOA associated morbidity rate: 11.1%. Overall mortality rate was 54.2% and early mortality rate (≤ 24 h) was 44.4%. In the univariate analysis, factors related to early mortality (≤ 24 h) are lower pH values (p = 0.03), higher base deficit (p = 0.021), longer INR (p = 0.012), minor increase in systolic blood pressure after the REBOA inflation (p = 0.03) and total aortic occlusion (p = 0.008). None of these values resulted significant in the multivariate analysis. In severe hemodynamically unstable pelvic trauma management, REBOA is a viable option when utilized in experienced centers as a bridge to other treatments; its use might be, however, accompanied with severe-to-lethal complications.Entities:
Keywords: ABO; EVTM; Hemodynamic; International; Morbidity; Mortality; Pelvis; REBOA; Registry; Trauma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32130669 DOI: 10.1007/s13304-020-00735-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Updates Surg ISSN: 2038-131X