1. 'Low initial pre-hospital end-tidal carbon dioxide predicts inferior clinical outcomes in trauma patients'
- Author
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Pascal Udekwu, Mary K. Bryant, Rebecca G. Maine, Nicole Cook, Jaclyn N. Portelli Tremont, Zachary Patel, Trista Reid, and Scott M. Moore
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood transfusion ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Trauma center ,Vital signs ,Carbon Dioxide ,Triage ,End tidal ,Hospitals ,Trauma Centers ,Capnography ,Internal medicine ,Hemorrhagic shock ,Cohort ,medicine ,Humans ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Injury Severity Score ,business ,Retrospective Studies ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Current guidelines continue to lead to under- and over-triage of injured patients in the pre-hospital setting. End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2) has been correlated with mortality and hemorrhagic shock in trauma patients. This study examines the correlation between ETCO2 and in-hospital outcomes among non-intubated patients in the pre-hospital setting.We retrospectively studied a cohort of non-intubated adult trauma patients with initial pre-hospital side-stream capnography-obtained ETCO2 presenting via ground transport from a single North Carolina EMS agency to a level one trauma center from January 2018 to December 2018. Using the Liu method, the optimal threshold for low ETCO2 was ≤ 28.5 mmHg.Initial pre-hospital ETCO2 was recorded for 324 (22.0%) of 1473 patients with EMS data. Patients with low ETCO2 (N = 98, 30.3% of cohort) were older (median 58y vs 45y), but mechanisms of injury and scene vital signs were similar (p0.05) between low and normal/high ETCO2 cohorts. Median injury severity score (ISS) did not differ significantly between the low and normal/high ETCO2 groups (5 vs 8, p=0.48). Compared to normal/high ETCO2, low ETCO2 correlated with increased unadjusted odds of mortality (OR 5.06), in-hospital complications (OR 2.06), and blood transfusion requirement (OR 3.05), p0.05. Low ETCO2 was associated with 7.25 odds of mortality (95% CI 2.19,23.97, p=0.001) and 3.94 odds of blood transfusion (95% CI 1.32-11.78) after adjusting for age, ISS, and scene GCS. All but one of the massive transfusion patients (N = 8/9) had a low pre-hospital ETCO2.Low initial pre-hospital ETCO2 associates with poor clinical outcomes despite similar ISS and mechanisms of injury. ETCO2 is a potentially useful pre-hospital point-of-care tool to aid triage of trauma patients as it may identify hemorrhaging patients and predict mortality.
- Published
- 2021