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[Emergency Management of Polytrauma Patients]

Overview
Journal Zentralbl Chir
Publisher Thieme
Specialty General Surgery
Date 1996 Jan 1
PMID 9027149
Citations 5
Authors
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Abstract

Adequate prehospital care of the severely traumatised patient is important to prevent or attenuate early as well as late life threatening complications, such as tissue hypoxia, ischemia/reperfusion injury and finally multiple organ failure. A mismatch of oxygen supply and oxygen demand is a hallmark in the pathophysiology of multiple trauma. Oxygen supply may be diminished by the following factors: shock-related decrease of cardiac output, anemia and hypoxia. On the other hand, oxygen demand may be increased by pain, panic, and agitation. Hence, it is a central point in prehospital care to reduce this supply-demand imbalance by identification and prompt reversal of the underlying causes. Most often, shock is caused by hypovolaemia and tissue injury ("traumatic-hemorrhagic shock"). However, shock may also be a result of central nervous system injury (neurogenic shock as a special form of distributive shock) or circulatory obstruction, e.g tension pneumothorax or cardiac tamponade (obstructive shock). Volume resuscitation by means of crystalloid or colloid solutions is an essential part in the therapy of the traumatic-haemorrhagic shock. In addition, catecholamines may be necessary in order to achieve an adequate arterial pressure. However, if bleeding cannot be controlled in the prehospital setting, only moderate volume support and permissive hypotension as well as rapid transportation into the next hospital may be preferable. This may be the case in penetrating thoracic or abdominal injuries as well as in traumatic amputations of the proximal limb. On the contrary, in patients with severe head injury, hypotension must be avoided by all means. Obstructive shock has to be treated urgently by insertion of a chest drain or drainage of the pericardium, respectively. Under all circumstances, it is an essential part of prehospital therapy to provide sufficient analgesia as soon as possible. Prehospital anesthesia, combined with artificial ventilation may be necessary for optimal patient management. Furthermore, ventilatory support is indicated when respiratory failure, loss of consciousness, or severe shock are present. Additional oxygen should be given whenever possible, even in the absence of an overt hypoxic state. Important additional measures are cervical spine immobilisation and reposition as well as splinting of long bone fractures or luxations, in order to avoid secondary injury of the spinal cord or ongoing tissue and vascular damage.

Citing Articles

Influence of prehospital fluid resuscitation on patients with multiple injuries in hemorrhagic shock in patients from the DGU trauma registry.

HuBmann B, Lefering R, Taeger G, Waydhas C, Ruchholtz S J Emerg Trauma Shock. 2011; 4(4):465-71.

PMID: 22090739 PMC: 3214502. DOI: 10.4103/0974-2700.86630.


[Lethality and outcome in multiple injured patients after severe abdominal and pelvic trauma. Influence of preclinical volume replacement - an analysis of 604 patients from the trauma registry of the DGU].

Hussmann B, Taeger G, Lefering R, Waydhas C, Nast-Kolb D, Ruchholtz S Unfallchirurg. 2010; 114(8):705-12.

PMID: 21152886 DOI: 10.1007/s00113-010-1842-4.


[Management of spine injuries in polytraumatized patients].

Heyde C, Ertel W, Kayser R Orthopade. 2005; 34(9):889-905.

PMID: 16096745 DOI: 10.1007/s00132-005-0847-0.


[The preclinical care of polytraumatized patients].

Dohnert J, Auerbach B, Wyrwich W, Heyde C Orthopade. 2005; 34(9):837-51.

PMID: 16049722 DOI: 10.1007/s00132-005-0843-4.


[Polytrauma and air rescue. A retrospective analysis of trauma care in eastern Austria exemplified by an urban trauma center].

Weninger P, Trimmel H, Nau T, Aldrian S, Konig F, Vecsei V Unfallchirurg. 2005; 108(7):559-66.

PMID: 15959746 DOI: 10.1007/s00113-005-0949-5.