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Complete and Partial Aortic Occlusion for the Treatment of Hemorrhagic Shock in Swine

Authors :
Yuzi Tian
Shalini Roy
Julia Hays
Umar F. Bhatti
Qiufang Deng
Nathan J. Graham
Aaron M. Williams
Gregory Hays
Basil M. Baccouche
Hasan B. Alam
Yongqing Li
Vahagn C. Nikolian
Baoling Liu
Isabel S. Dennahy
Mohammed Harajli
Kiril Chtraklin
Jing Zhou
Panpan Chang
Source :
J Vis Exp
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
MyJove Corporation, 2018.

Abstract

Hemorrhage remains the leading cause of preventable deaths in trauma. Endovascular management of non-compressible torso hemorrhage has been at the forefront of trauma care in recent years. Since complete aortic occlusion presents serious concerns, the concept of partial aortic occlusion has gained a growing attention. Here, we present a large animal model of hemorrhagic shock to investigate the effects of a novel partial aortic balloon occlusion catheter and compare it with a catheter that works on the principles of complete aortic occlusion. Swine are anesthetized and instrumented in order to conduct controlled fixed-volume hemorrhage, and hemodynamic and physiological parameters are monitored. Following hemorrhage, aortic balloon occlusion catheters are inserted and inflated in the supraceliac aorta for 60 min, during which the animals receive whole-blood resuscitation as 20% of the total blood volume (TBV). Following balloon deflation, the animals are monitored in a critical care setting for 4 h, during which they receive fluid resuscitation and vasopressors as needed. The partial aortic balloon occlusion demonstrated improved distal mean arterial pressures (MAPs) during the balloon inflation, decreased markers of ischemia, and decreased fluid resuscitation and vasopressor use. As swine physiology and homeostatic responses following hemorrhage have been well-documented and are like those in humans, a swine hemorrhagic shock model can be used to test various treatment strategies. In addition to treating hemorrhage, aortic balloon occlusion catheters have become popular for their role in cardiac arrest, cardiac and vascular surgery, and other high-risk elective surgical procedures.

Details

ISSN :
1940087X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Visualized Experiments
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....78635e327aae2d558ced7964d4980329