| Literature DB >> 33937720 |
Aaron Nauth1, Frank Hildebrand2, Heather Vallier3, Timothy Moore3, Luke Leenen4, Todd Mckinley5, Hans-Christoph Pape6.
Abstract
The management of multiply injured or severely injured patients is a complex and dynamic process. Timely and safe fracture fixation is a critical component of the multidisciplinary care that these patients require. Effective management of these patients, and their orthopaedic injuries, requires a strong understanding of the pathophysiology of the response to trauma and indicators of patient status, as well as an appreciation for the dynamic nature of these parameters. Substantial progress in both clinical and basic science research in this area has advanced our understanding of these concepts and our approach to management of the polytraumatized patient. This article summarizes a symposium on this topic that was presented by an international panel of experts at the 2020 Virtual Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Trauma Association.Entities:
Keywords: damage control surgery; early appropriate care; inflammation; neutrophil; polytrauma
Year: 2021 PMID: 33937720 PMCID: PMC8016602 DOI: 10.1097/OI9.0000000000000116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: OTA Int ISSN: 2574-2167
Indications for the use of RIA in clinical practice∗
| 1. To reduce the degree of fat embolization |
| 2. To clear the medullary canal of bone marrow/reaming debris |
| 3. To size the medullary canal (IM implant or prosthesis) |
| 4. For bone graft harvesting |
| 5. For removal of tissue from IM canal (e.g. treatment of IM infection) |
The RIA device is approved for these indications by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of the USA.
Figure 1Causes to develop a new, modified reamer irrigator aspirator version (RIA2).
Figure 2The new features of >RIA2 are depicted in Figure 2. They include a new auger to improve backflow despite a smaller irrigation tube, improved coupling, and a new seal (in yellow), a quick connect for the harvesting tube and, most importantly, exchange options for the reamer head intraoperatively between 10 and 18 mm).
Revised parameters to assess the borderline trauma patient in 2020[14]
| Parameters | ||
|---|---|---|
| Static parameters | • Polytrauma ISS > 20 and AIS chest > 2• Thoracic Trauma Score (TTS) > grade 2 | |
| • Bilateral lung contusion: first plain film or• Chest CT:unilateral bisegmental contusionbilateral uni- or bisegmental contusionflail chest | ||
| Multiple long bone fractures + truncal injury AIS 2 or more | ||
| Polytrauma with abdominal/pelvic trauma (SBP <90 mm Hg) (Moore 3 visceral injury and Hemorrhagic Shock) | ||
| Safe definitive surgery (SDS) and damage control (DCO) | ||
| Presumed operation time > 6 hintraoperative reassessment:• coagulopathy (ROTEM/FIBTEM)• lactate (< 2.0–2.5 mmol/L)• body temperature stable• requirement > 3 pRBC/h | ||
| Dynamic parameters | Massive transfusion• 10 units RBCs per 6 h(initiation of goal-directed therapy – massive transfusion protocol) | |
| • ROTEM/FIBTEM• Lactate clearance < 2.5 mmol/L (24 h) |
AIS = abbreviated injury scale; ISS = injury severity score; ROTEM = rotational thromboelastometry; RR = respiratory rate; SBP = systolic blood pressure.