Hot protocol traumatic arrest, post traumatic stress disorder expert witness.
Witnessed prehospital traumatic arrest: predictors of survival to hospital discharge.
Abstract
Trauma patients are rapidly transported to the hospital for definitive care. Nonetheless, some are alive upon Emergency Medical Services (EMS) arrival but arrest on-scene or during transport. The study objective was to examine EMS-witnessed traumatic arrests to define patients who survived hospital discharge. Patients sustaining EMS-witnessed traumatic arrest and entered into the National Trauma Data Bank were included (2007-2018). Mortality defined groups: survival to hospital discharge vs. in-hospital death vs. death in ED/declared dead on arrival (DOA). ANOVA/Chi-square compared cohorts. Multivariable analysis established factors associated with survival out of ED and to hospital discharge. After exclusions, 14,177 patients met the criteria: 10% survived, 22% died in hospital, and 68% died in ED/DOA. Survivors tended to be female (33% vs. 23% vs. 23%, p < 0.001), blunt traumas (71% vs. 56% vs. 60%, p < 0.001), have higher scene GCS (15 [7-15] vs. 3 [3-11] vs. 3 [3-7], p < 0.001), and lower injury severity (ISS 13 [7-26] vs. 27 [18-41] vs. 25 [10-30], p < 0.001), particularly of the head (AIS 0 [0-2] vs. 0 [0-4] vs. 1 [0-4], p < 0.001). Survival to hospital discharge was independently associated with higher field GCS (OR 1.252, p < 0.001) and SBP (OR 1.006, p < 0.001), and Head AIS scores (OR 1.073, p < 0.001). Increasing age (OR 0.984, p < 0.001), higher ISS (OR 0.975, p < 0.001), male sex (OR 0.695, p < 0.001), and penetrating mechanism of injury (OR 0.537, p < 0.001) were associated with reduced survival to discharge. After EMS-witnessed traumatic cardiac arrest, survivors were more likely to be young, female, injured by blunt trauma, and less hypotensive/comatose on-scene. These findings may have implications for ED resuscitation or declaration of care futility and should be further investigated with a prospective multicenter study.
Authors (8) : Morgan Schellenberg, Natthida Owattanapanich, Chaiss Ugarte, Areg Grigorian, Jeffry Nahmias, Lydia Lam, Matthew J Martin, Kenji Inaba
Source : European journal of trauma and emergency surgery : official publication of the European Trauma Society
Article Information
Year | 2023 |
Type | Journal Article |
DOI | 10.1007/s00068-023-02398-3 |
ISSN | 1863-9941 |
Volume |
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