Permissive Hypotension in Bleeding Trauma Patients: Helpful or Not and When?

Author:

Gourgiotis Stavros1,Gemenetzis George2,Kocher Hemant M.3,Aloizos Stavros4,Salemis Nikolaos S.5,Grammenos Stylianos6

Affiliation:

1. Stavros Gourgiotis is a surgeon consultant, 2nd Department of Surgery, 401 General Military Hospital, Athens, Greece.

2. George Gemenetzis is a resident (PGY 2), 2nd Department of Surgery, 401 General Military Hospital.

3. Hemant M. Kocher is a surgeon consultant, Barts and the London HPB Centre, Royal London Hospital, London, United Kingdom.

4. Stavros Aloizos is an anesthesiologist and director of the intensive care unit, 401 General Military Hospital.

5. Nikolaos S. Salemis is a surgeon and director of the breast cancer unit, 401 General Military Hospital.

6. Stylianos Grammenos is a resident (PGY 4), 2nd Department of Surgery, 401 General Military Hospital.

Abstract

Severity of hemorrhage and rate of bleeding are fundamental factors in the outcomes of trauma. Intravenous administration of fluid is the basic treatment to maintain blood pressure until bleeding is controlled. The main guideline, used almost worldwide, Advanced Trauma Life Support, established by the American College of Surgeons in 1976, calls for aggressive administration of intravenous fluids, primarily crystalloid solutions. Several other guidelines, such as Prehospital Trauma Life Support, Trauma Evaluation and Management, and Advanced Trauma Operative Management, are applied according to a patient’s current condition. However, the ideal strategy remains unclear. With permissive hypotension, also known as hypotensive resuscitation, fluid administration is less aggressive. The available models of permissive hypotension are based on hypotheses in hypovolemic physiology and restricted clinical trials in animals. Before these models can be used in patients, randomized, controlled clinical trials are necessary.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

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