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      Effects of Fluid Resuscitation on Mesenteric Microvascular Blood Flow and Lymphatic Activity After Severe Hemorrhagic Shock in Rats

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          Immediate versus delayed fluid resuscitation for hypotensive patients with penetrating torso injuries.

          Fluid resuscitation may be detrimental when given before bleeding is controlled in patients with trauma. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of delaying fluid resuscitation until the time of operative intervention in hypotensive patients with penetrating injuries to the torso. We conducted a prospective trial comparing immediate and delayed fluid resuscitation in 598 adults with penetrating torso injuries who presented with a pre-hospital systolic blood pressure of < or = 90 mm Hg. The study setting was a city with a single centralized system of pre-hospital emergency care and a single receiving facility for patients with major trauma. Patients assigned to the immediate-resuscitation group received standard fluid resuscitation before they reached the hospital and in the trauma center, and those assigned to the delayed-resuscitation group received intravenous cannulation but no fluid resuscitation until they reached the operating room. Among the 289 patients who received delayed fluid resuscitation, 203 (70 percent) survived and were discharged from the hospital, as compared with 193 of the 309 patients (62 percent) who received immediate fluid resuscitation (P = 0.04). The mean estimated intraoperative blood loss was similar in the two groups. Among the 238 patients in the delayed-resuscitation group who survived to the postoperative period, 55 (23 percent) had one or more complications (adult respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis syndrome, acute renal failure, coagulopathy, wound infection, and pneumonia), as compared with 69 of the 227 patients (30 percent) in the immediate-resuscitation group (P = 0.08). The duration of hospitalization was shorter in the delayed-resuscitation group. For hypotensive patients with penetrating torso injuries, delay of aggressive fluid resuscitation until operative intervention improves the outcome.
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            Physiologic mechanisms of postischemic tissue injury.

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              Resuscitation from severe hemorrhage.

              The potential to be successfully resuscitation from severe traumatic hemorrhagic shock is not only limited by the "golden 1 hr", but also by the "brass (or platinum) 10 mins" for combat casualties and civilian trauma victims with traumatic exsanguination. One research challenge is to determine how best to prevent cardiac arrest during severe hemorrhage, before control of bleeding is possible. Another research challenge is to determine the critical limits of, and optimal treatments for, protracted hemorrhagic hypotension, in order to prevent "delayed" multiple organ failure after hemostasis and all-out resuscitation. Animal research is shifting from the use of unrealistic, pressure-controlled, hemorrhagic shock models and partially realistic, volume-controlled hemorrhagic shock models to more realistic, uncontrolled hemorrhagic shock outcome models. Animal outcome models of combined trauma and shock are needed; a challenge is to find a humane and clinically realistic long-term method for analgesia that does not interfere with cardiovascular responses. Clinical potentials in need of research are shifting from normotensive to hypotensive (limited) fluid resuscitation with plasma substitutes. Topics include optimal temperature, fluid composition, analgesia, and pharmacotherapy. Hypotensive fluid resuscitation in uncontrolled hemorrhagic shock with the addition of moderate resuscitative (28 degrees to 32 degrees C) hypothermia looks promising in the laboratory. Regarding the composition of the resuscitation fluid, despite encouraging results with new preparations of stroma-free hemoglobin and hypertonic salt solutions with colloid, searches for the optimal combination of oxygen-carrying blood substitute, colloid, and electrolyte solution for limited fluid resuscitation with the smallest volume should continue. For titrating treatment of shock, blood lactate concentrations are of questionable value although metabolic acidemia seems helpful for prognostication. Development of devices for early noninvasive monitoring of multiple parameters in the field is indicated. Molecular research applies more to protracted hypovolemic shock followed by the systemic inflammatory response syndrome or septic shock, which were not the major topics of this discussion.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Shock
                Shock
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                1073-2322
                2003
                January 2003
                : 19
                : 1
                : 55-60
                Article
                10.1097/00024382-200301000-00011
                769267be-ec19-4fd7-b9e0-871f6c9565e9
                © 2003
                History

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