1. A Prospective Observational Study of Acute Traumatic Coagulopathy in in Traumatic Bleeding from the Battlefield
- Author
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Mark J. Midwinter, Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca, Emrys Kirkman, Sarah Watts, Kiran Parmar, Tom Woolley, Beverley J. Hunt, and Robert Gwyther
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibrinogen ,medicine.disease ,Hyperfibrinolysis ,Blast injury ,Fibrinolysis ,D-dimer ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Coagulopathy ,Coagulation testing ,business ,medicine.drug ,Blood sampling - Abstract
Background Acute trauma coagulopathy (ATC) is defined by an admission prothrombin time ratio (PTr) >1.2 or reduced clot amplitude, on viscoelastic testing. It is associated with increased mortality. Whether ATC occurs after military trauma and whether it is similar to civilian ATC has not been studied. Military trauma differs from civilian trauma with most injuries from explosions and high velocity gun-shot wounds (GSW). This study aimed to characterize military ATC, and to explore possible differences due to the mechanism of injury. Methods: Casualties meeting full trauma team activation on admission to a military field hospital in Afghanistan were eligible for enrollment. After routine blood sampling, waste plasma was prepared, frozen and transported to the UK for further analysis. Findings 77% had ATC as defined by PTr >1.2; only 19% had ATC as defined by a ROTEM A5
- Published
- 2018