Articles: trauma.
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This review aims to examine recent advances in the understanding of injury-induced endotheliopathy and therapeutics to mitigate its development in critically injured patients. ⋯ Injury-induced endotheliopathy represents an important pathologic response to trauma. Key biomarkers, such as syndecan-1, can aid in the diagnosis, but testing is not yet available clinically. As the mechanisms of endotheliopathy are better understood, therapeutics are being identified and show promise. To date, plasma has been the most widely studied; however, like all therapeutics for injury-induced endotheliopathy, it has primarily been studied in the preclinical setting.
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Background and Objectives: Two major classification systems exist for rib fracture (RFX) displacement. One system uses a 50% displacement threshold: Grade I (<50%), Grade II (≥50% to <100%), and Grade III (completely dislocated). Another proposes a 10% threshold: Undisplaced (<10%), Offset (≥10% to <100%), and Displaced (completely dislocated). ⋯ The area under the receiver operating curve for both MLR models was 0.757 in the total patient group and 0.823 in the subgroup that excluded patients with completely displaced RFX. Conclusions: Completely displaced RFX is the most crucial factor, regardless of the classification criteria. Unless ribs are completely displaced, the degree of displacement may not be crucial, and the number of segmental RFX was a significant risk factor.
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Journal of neurosurgery · Jan 2025
Predictive factors for traumatic cerebral contusion volume, expansion, and outcomes.
Traumatic hemorrhagic cerebral contusions are a well-established cause of morbidity and mortality in neurosurgery. This study aimed to determine prognostic factors for long-term functional outcomes and longitudinal contusion volume changes in traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. ⋯ Functional outcomes in traumatic cerebral contusion patients may be associated with age and admission GCS score, and verbal GCS score may predict initial contusion volume and contusion expansion. These findings supplement an evolving understanding of factors that influence outcomes in patients with cerebral contusions, and further study into the utility of GCS to guide these decisions could help to guide the clinical management of these highly complex patients.
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In recent years, it has become apparent that fibrinolytic dysfunction and endotheliopathy develop in up to 40% of patients during the first hours following thermal injury and are associated with poor outcomes and increased resuscitation requirements. Rapidly following burn injury, the fibrinolytic system is activated, with activation generally greater with increased severity of injury. Very high plasma concentrations of plasmin-antiplasmin complex (marker of activation) have been associated with mortality. ⋯ Here we review the incidence and effects of these responses after burn injury and explore mechanisms and potential interactions with the early inflammatory response. Available data from burn and nonburn trauma suggest that the fibrinolytic, endothelial, and inflammatory systems interact extensively and that dysregulation in one may exacerbate dysregulation in the others. This raises the possibility that successful treatment of one may favorably impact the others.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of continuous vital signs data analysis versus venous lactate for the prediction of lifesaving interventions in patients with traumatic shock.
Introduction: The prehospital environment is fraught with operational constraints, making it difficult to assess the need for resources such as lifesaving interventions (LSI) for adults with traumatic injuries. While invasive methods such as lactate have been found to be highly predictive for estimating injury severity and resource requirements, noninvasive methods, to include continuous vital signs ( VS ), have the potential to provide prognostic information that can be quickly acquired, interpreted, and incorporated into decision making. In this work, we hypothesized that an analysis of continuous VS would have predictive capacity comparable to lactate and other laboratory tests for the prediction of injury severity, need for LSIs and intensive care unit admission. ⋯ The model using all laboratory data yielded the highest sensitivity and sensitivity (AUROC, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.74-0.81). Discussion: The results from this study suggest that continuous VS obtained from autonomous monitors in an aeromedical environment may be helpful for predicting LSIs and the critical care requirements for traumatically injured adults. The collection and use of noninvasively obtained physiological data during the early stages of prehospital care may be useful for in developing user-friendly early warning systems for identifying potentially unstable trauma patients.