| Literature DB >> 34040091 |
Takeshi Wada1, Atsushi Shiraishi2, Satoshi Gando3,4, Kazuma Yamakawa5, Seitaro Fujishima6, Daizoh Saitoh7, Shigeki Kushimoto8, Hiroshi Ogura9, Toshikazu Abe10,11, Toshihiko Mayumi12, Junichi Sasaki13, Joji Kotani14, Naoshi Takeyama15, Ryosuke Tsuruta16, Kiyotsugu Takuma17, Norio Yamashita18, Shin-Ichiro Shiraishi19, Hiroto Ikeda20, Yasukazu Shiino21, Takehiko Tarui22, Taka-Aki Nakada23, Toru Hifumi24, Kohji Okamoto25, Yuichiro Sakamoto26, Akiyoshi Hagiwara27, Tomohiko Masuno28, Masashi Ueyama29, Satoshi Fujimi30, Yutaka Umemura9, Yasuhiro Otomo31.
Abstract
Trauma patients die from massive bleeding due to disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) with a fibrinolytic phenotype in the early phase, which transforms to DIC with a thrombotic phenotype in the late phase of trauma, contributing to the development of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) and a consequently poor outcome. This is a sub-analysis of a multicenter prospective descriptive cross-sectional study on DIC to evaluate the effect of a DIC diagnosis on the survival probability and predictive performance of DIC scores for massive transfusion, MODS, and hospital death in severely injured trauma patients. A DIC diagnosis on admission was associated with a lower survival probability (Log Rank P < 0.001), higher frequency of massive transfusion and MODS and a higher mortality rate than no such diagnosis. The DIC scores at 0 and 3 h significantly predicted massive transfusion, MODS, and hospital death. Markers of thrombin and plasmin generation and fibrinolysis inhibition also showed a good predictive ability for these three items. In conclusion, a DIC diagnosis on admission was associated with a low survival probability. DIC scores obtained immediately after trauma predicted a poor prognosis of severely injured trauma patients.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34040091 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90492-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379