Circulation First for the Rapidly Bleeding Trauma Patient—It Is Time to Reconsider the ABCs of Trauma Care
Author:
Affiliation:
1. University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville
2. Division of Acute Care Surgery, Inova Health System, Falls Church, Virginia
3. Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Lubbock
Abstract
Publisher
American Medical Association (AMA)
Subject
Surgery
Link
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/articlepdf/2805044/jamasurgery_ferrada_2023_si_220011_1691551342.95801.pdf
Reference6 articles.
1. Pre-hospital endotracheal intubation and positive pressure ventilation is associated with hypotension and decreased survival in hypovolemic trauma patients: an analysis of the National Trauma Data Bank.;Shafi;J Trauma,2005
2. Meta-analysis of post-intubation hypotension: a plea to consider circulation first in hypovolemic patients.;Ferrada;Am Surg,2019
3. Shifting priorities from intubation to circulation first in hypotensive trauma patients.;Ferrada;Am Surg,2018
4. Circulation first—the time has come to question the sequencing of care in the ABCs of trauma; an American Association for the Surgery of Trauma multicenter trial.;Ferrada;World J Emerg Surg,2018
5. Endovascular resuscitation and trauma management (EVTM)—practical aspects and implementation.;Hörer;Shock,2021
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1. Guideline Implementation Is Improving Trauma Care in the Wild, Wild West;JAMA Surgery;2024-01-24
2. The Impact of Out-of-Hospital Time and Prehospital Intubation on Return of Spontaneous Circulation following Resuscitative Thoracotomy in Traumatic Cardiac Arrest;Prehospital Emergency Care;2023-11-28
3. Prioritizing Circulation to Improve Outcomes for Patients with Exsanguinating Injury: A Literature Review and Techniques to Help Clinicians Achieve Bleeding Control;Journal of the American College of Surgeons;2023-11-28
4. Enriching the discussion of shifting the ABCs of trauma to XABCs;The American Journal of Surgery;2023-09
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