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Curr Opin Crit Care · Dec 2019
ReviewCoagulopathy in the surgical patient: trauma-induced and drug-induced coagulopathies.
- Ruben Peralta, Hassan Al Thani, and Sandro Rizoli.
- Department of Surgery, Trauma Surgery, Hamad General Hospital, Doha, Qatar.
- Curr Opin Crit Care. 2019 Dec 1; 25 (6): 668-674.
Purpose Of ReviewCoagulopathy is the derangement of hemostasis that in surgical patients may result in excessive bleeding, clotting or no measurable effect. The purpose of this review is to provide an overview of the most current evidence and practical approach to trauma- and drug-induced coagulopathy in surgical patients.Recent FindingsEarly identification and timely correction of coagulopathy in surgical patients with significant bleeding is paramount to prevent death and other consequences of hemorrhage. Trauma-induced coagulopathy is managed by protocols recommending fibrinogen replacement, FFP, platelets, TXA and frequent lab monitorization including viscoelastic tests. For warfarin- or DOAC-induced coagulopathy, the management follows similar principles plus drug reversal. Warfarin is diagnosed by prolonged international normalized ratio and reversed by PCC or FFP. DOACs are inconsistently diagnosed by routine coagulation tests, and reversed by a combination of TXA, PCC and specific antidotes (if available).SummaryDespite different understandings of the pathophysiology, trauma- and drug-induced coagulopathies are managed following similar protocols. In most of cases of significant surgical bleeding, timely and protocolized approach to correct the coagulopathy is likely to improve patients' outcome.
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