Mild to Moderate to Severe: What Drives the Severity of ARDS in Trauma Patients?

Author:

Daher Pamela1,Teixeira Pedro G.1,Coopwood Thomas B.1,Brown Lawrence H.1,Ali Sadia1,Aydelotte Jayson D.1,Ford Brent J.2,Hensely Adam S.2,Brown Carlos V.1

Affiliation:

1. Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas and

2. University of Texas Medical Branch Galveston, Galveston, Texas

Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a complex inflammatory process with multifactorial etiologies. Risk factors for its development have been extensively studied, but factors associated with worsening severity of disease, as defined by the Berlin criteria, are poorly understood. A retrospective chart and trauma registry review identified trauma patients in our surgical intensive care unit who developed ARDS, defined according to the Berlin definition, between 2010 and 2015. The primary outcome was development of mild, moderate, or severe ARDS. A logistic regression model identified risk factors associated with developing ARDS and with worsening severity of disease. Of 2704 total patients, 432 (16%) developed ARDS. Of those, 100 (23%) were categorized as mild, 176 (41%) as moderate, and 156 (36%) as severe. Two thousand two hundred and seventy-two patients who did not develop ARDS served as controls. Male gender, blunt trauma, severe head and chest injuries, and red blood cell as well as total blood product transfusions are independent risk factors associated with ARDS. Worsening severity of disease is associated with severe chest trauma and volume of plasma transfusion. Novel findings in our study include the association between plasma transfusions and specifically severe chest trauma with worsening severity of ARDS in trauma patients.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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