• Shock · Dec 2021

    Prehospital Mortality Due to Hemorrhagic Shock Remains High and Unchanged: A Summary of Current Civilian EMS Practices and New Military Changes.

    • Juan Duchesne, Sharven Taghavi, August Houghton, Mansoor Khan, Bruno Perreira, Bryan Cotton, Danielle Tatum, and Damage Control Resuscitation Committee.
    • Division Chief Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery Tulane, New Orleans, Louisiana.
    • Shock. 2021 Dec 1; 56 (1S): 383-8.

    AbstractMortality secondary to trauma-related hemorrhagic shock has not improved for several decades. Underlying the stall in progress is the conundrum of effective prehospital interventions for hemorrhage control. As we know, neither pressing hard on the gas nor "stay and play" has changed mortality over the last 20 years. For this reason, when dealing with effective changes that will improve severe hemorrhage mortality outcomes, there is a need for the creation of a hybrid prehospital model. Improvements in mortality outcomes for patients with severe hemorrhage based on evidence for common civilian prehospital procedures such as in-field intubation and immediate fluid resuscitation with crystalloid solution are weak at best. The use of tourniquets, once considered too risky to use, however, has risen dramatically in large part due to success seen during their use in the military. Their use in the civilian setting shows promising results. Recently updated military Advanced Resuscitative Care guidelines propose the use of prehospital whole blood transfusion as well as in-field use of Zone 1 Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta. Several case studies from Europe suggest these strategies are feasible for use in the civilian population, but could they be implemented in the US?Copyright © 2020 by the Shock Society.

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