• Lancet · Oct 2014

    Review

    Postinjury abdominal compartment syndrome: from recognition to prevention.

    • Zsolt J Balogh, William Lumsdaine, Ernest E Moore, and Frederick A Moore.
    • Department of Traumatology, John Hunter Hospital and University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia. Electronic address: zsolt.balogh@hnehealth.nsw.gov.au.
    • Lancet. 2014 Oct 18;384(9952):1466-75.

    AbstractPostinjury abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS) is an example of a deadly clinical occurrence that was eliminated by strategic research and focused preventions. In the 1990s, the syndrome emerged with the widespread use of damage control surgery and aggressive crystalloid-based resuscitation. Patients who previously exsanguinated on the operating table made it to intensive care units, but then developed highly lethal hyperacute respiratory, renal, and cardiac failure due to increased abdominal pressure. Among many factors, delayed haemorrhage control and preload driven excessive use of crystalloid resuscitation were identified as modifiable predictors. The surrogate effect of preventive strategies, including the challenge of the 40-year-old standard of large volume crystalloid resuscitation for traumatic shock, greatly reduced cases of ACS. The discoveries were rapidly translated to civilian and military trauma surgical practices and fundamentally changed the way trauma patients are resuscitated today with substantially improved outcomes.

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