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Semin. Thromb. Hemost. · Oct 2010
ReviewCoagulation abnormalities in the trauma patient: the role of point-of-care thromboelastography.
- Eduardo Gonzalez, Fredric M Pieracci, Ernest E Moore, and Jeffry L Kashuk.
- Department of Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center and University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado, USA.
- Semin. Thromb. Hemost. 2010 Oct 1;36(7):723-37.
AbstractCurrent recommendations for resuscitation of the critically injured patient are limited by a lack of point-of-care (POC) assessment of coagulation status. Accordingly, the potential exists for indiscriminant blood component administration. Furthermore, although thromboembolic events have been described shortly after injury, the time sequence of post-injury coagulation changes is unknown. Our current understanding of hemostasis has shifted from a classic view, in which coagulation was considered a chain of catalytic enzyme reactions, to the cell-based model (CBM), representing the interplay between the cellular and plasma components of clot formation. Thromboelastography (TEG), a time-sensitive dynamic assay of the viscoelastic properties of blood, closely parallels the CBM, permitting timely, goal-directed restoration of hemostasis via POC monitoring of coagulation status. TEG-based therapy allows for goal-directed blood product administration in trauma, with potential avoidance of the complications resulting from overzealous component administration, as well as the ability to monitor post-injury coagulation status and thromboprophylaxis. This overview addresses coagulation status and thromboprophylaxis management in the trauma patient and the emerging role of POC TEG.© Thieme Medical Publishers.
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