| Literature DB >> 32209132 |
Abstract
Hemorrhage is the leading cause of preventable death in combat trauma and the secondary cause of death in civilian trauma. A significant number of deaths due to hemorrhage occur before and in the first hour after hospital arrival. A literature search was performed through PubMed, Scopus, and Institute of Scientific Information databases for English language articles using terms relating to hemostatic agents, prehospital, battlefield or combat dressings, and prehospital hemostatic resuscitation, followed by cross-reference searching. Abstracts were screened to determine relevance and whether appropriate further review of the original articles was warranted. Based on these findings, this paper provides a review of a variety of hemostatic agents ranging from clinically approved products for human use to newly developed concepts with great potential for use in prehospital settings. These hemostatic agents can be administered either systemically or locally to stop bleeding through different mechanisms of action. Comparisons of current hemostatic products and further directions for prehospital hemorrhage control are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Hemorrhage control; Hemostatic agent; Trauma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32209132 PMCID: PMC7093954 DOI: 10.1186/s40779-020-00241-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mil Med Res ISSN: 2054-9369
Potential hemostatic agents for prehospital and combat hemorrhage control
| Typical hemostats | Bleeding sites | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Intravenous infusion | ||
| Coagulation factor concentrates: fibrinogen, recombinant factor VII, prothrombin complex [ | Extremity/junctional/truncal hemorrhage | Used clinically and in remote operational environments, showing logistic benefits, requiring more randomized controlled trials for clinical benefits |
| Dried plasma [ | Extremity/junctional/truncal hemorrhage | Used prehospitally and on the battlefield, showing logistic benefits and a positive effect on coagulation profile, with no effects on other outcomes |
| Tranexamic acid [ | Extremity/junctional/truncal hemorrhage | Used prehospitally and on the battlefield, suggesting a survival advantage to severely bleeding patients |
| Dried platelets [ | Extremity/junctional/truncal hemorrhage | Under development |
| Platelet substitutes/synthetic platelets [ | Extremity/junctional/truncal hemorrhage | Under development |
| Synthetic polymers: polySTAT [ | Extremity/junctional/truncal hemorrhage | Under development, improved survival compared to an albumin control in a rat femoral artery injury |
| Local application | ||
| Hemostatic dressings: Combat Gauze, Celox Gauze, ChitoGauze, HemCon dressing [ | Extremity/junctional hemorrhage | Used on the battlefield and in prehospital settings |
| Injectable and self-expanding sponges (XStat), intracavitary forms (ResQFoam, ClotFoam), in situ forming gels, self-propelling particles [ | Truncal hemorrhage | Under development |
Commercial fibrin sealant patch/dressings
| Product name | Composition | Applications |
|---|---|---|
| TachoSil (Takeda Pharma A/S) [ | An absorbable fibrin sealant patch consisting of a thin equine collagen sponge coated with human fibrinogen (5.5 mg/cm2) and human thrombin (2.0 U/cm2) | Secondary treatment of local bleeding in patients undergoing hepatic resection |
| Fibrin sealant (TachoComb H) [ | Equine collagen layered with human fibrinogen, 5.5 mg/cm2, and human thrombin 2.0 U/cm2 | Applied to cortical brain lesions in rabbits under normal coagulation and following exposure to plasminogen activator to induce hyperfibrinolysis |
| Fibrin sealant dressing (TachoComb) [ | Equine collagen layered with human fibrinogen, 4.3–6.7 mg/cm2, and bovine thrombin 1.5–2.5 U/cm2, Hafslund Nycomed Pharma | Applied to the cut surface of a rat kidney with light digital pressure for 2 min. After release of digital pressure, the dressing remained on the kidney for 30 min |
| Fibrin Pad (Omrix Biopharmaceuticals Ltd.) | A sterile, bioabsorbable product consisting of 2 constituent parts: a flexible matrix consisting of polyglactin (PG910) filaments needle-punched into a backing fabric of oxidized regenerated cellulose and a coating of human fibrinogen (7.8 mg/cm2) and human thrombin (31.5 U/cm2) | Management of soft tissue hemorrhage occurring during major surgical operations in the abdomen, retroperitoneum, pelvis, and noncardiac thoracic surgery [ |
| Used as an adjunct to achieve hemostasis during hepatic surgery [ | ||
Dry fibrin sealant dressing (DFSD) (American Red Cross Holland Laboratory, Rockville, MD) | Two outer layers of human fibrinogen (13.5 mg/cm2) and a middle layer of human thrombin (40 U/cm2) and CaCl2 (75 μg/cm2), freeze-dried onto an absorbable Dexon mesh backing [ | Applied in a small pool of blood and compressed over the wound with sufficient pressure to occlude the vessel for 4 min in a swine aortic injury model |
| Consisting of human fibrinogen, 0, 4, 8, 15 mg/cm2, human thrombin 37.5 U/cm2, and CaCl2, 40 mM/cm2, freeze-dried onto an absorbable polygalactin mesh backing [ | Applied to the surface of the injured liver of swine with 60-s compression in the dorsoventral and lateromedial direction, respectively. Only the 15-mg formulation significantly reduced blood loss. | |
| Consisted of human fibrinogen, 10.3 mg/cm2, human thrombin, 28.6 U/cm2, and CaCl2, 2.5 mg/cm2, all compressed onto a silicone backing [ | Applied in a uniform manner with 2 min of direct pressure and then tied in place with muslin backing in a swine model of ballistic injury | |
| Fibrin sealant dressing (Fibriseal) | 15 mg fibrinogen, 36 U thrombin, 3.6 mg CaCl2 /cm2 on a silicone backing [ | Held in place on the femoral arteriotomy with a mechanical device in a swine femoral artery injury model |
| Fibrin Sealant Patch (Evarrest) | Oxidized regenerated cellulose, polyglactin 910 nonwoven fibers, human fibrinogen, and human thrombin [ | Gauze packing with 3 min of standardized pressure in swine models of unilateral femoral artery puncture or a grade V liver laceration with timed free bleeding |