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- M A Dubick and C E Wade.
- Division of Military Trauma Research, Letterman Army Institute of Research, Presidio of San Francisco, California.
- J Trauma. 1994 Mar 1; 36 (3): 323-30.
AbstractRecent years have seen a renewed interest in the use of hypertonic-hyperoncotic solutions as plasma volume expanders for the treatment of hemorrhagic hypotension. In particular, a number of studies in experimental animals have addressed the efficacy and safety of small-volume infusions of 7.5% NaCl/6% dextran 70 (HSD). Employing models of fixed volume or fixed pressure hemorrhage, HSD has improved survival and reversed many of the hemodynamic, hormonal, and metabolic abnormalities associated with hemorrhagic shock. In the few human field trials completed to date, HSD has been shown to be potentially beneficial in hypotensive trauma patients who require surgery or have concomitant head injury. Extensive toxicologic evaluations and lack of reports of adverse effects in the human trials indicate that, at the proposed therapeutic dose of 4 mL/kg, HSD should present little risk.
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