Medical journal, Armed Forces India
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Med J Armed Forces India · Apr 2014
ReviewThe challenge in management of hemorrhagic shock in trauma.
Transfusion and resuscitation practices in trauma have undergone a sea change over the past decade. New understanding of transfusion physiology and experiences in military trauma over the last decade has identified key factors taken as challenges in trauma. The most important challenge remains acute traumatic coagulopathy (ATC) which sets in early after a trauma and spirals the patient into shock and continued bleeding. ⋯ Mortality is three to four times higher in a patient with coagulopathy and thus prevention and correction of coagulopathy is the central goal of the management of hemorrhagic shock in trauma. Damage control resuscitation (DCR), a strategy combining the techniques of permissive hypotension, hemostatic resuscitation and damage control surgery has been widely adopted as the preferred method of resuscitation in patients with haemorrhagic shock. The over-riding goals of DCR are to mitigate metabolic acidosis, hypothermia and coagulopathy, This article looks at the importance of acute traumatic coagulopathy, its etiology, diagnosis, effects and resuscitation strategies to prevent it and to see the background behind this shift.
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Over the last decade, mesh augmented surgical repair is being increasingly used in pelvic organ prolapse. Perigee and Apogee are comprehensive, single-use needle suspension kits that provide a standardized delivery method for mesh or graft-augmented repairs. This study has been carried out to study the safety and efficacy of the Perigee and Apogee mesh repair systems. ⋯ In the present study there was a significant improvement in the degree of prolapse after the mesh repair surgeries and the results were consistent even at 12 months follow up.