Category: Trauma
Keywords: Pelvic binder, trauma, survival, mortality (PubMed Search)
Posted: 2/18/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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This retrospective study of 66 trauma patients who had pelvic fractures attempted to determine if prehospital applied pelvic binders had an impact on mortality. There were 3 cohorts: appropriately applied binders (14), inappropriately applied (14 not at the level of the greater trochanter), and none applied (38). Survival for applied was 92% and those without was 81% which was not statistically significant. The authors concluded: “In conclusion, our study found that the use of prehospital pelvic binders did not show a significant effect on patient outcomes for those with unstable pelvic fractures. Instead, injury severity score (ISS) emerged as the most significant predictor of survival.”
Previous studies have shown regular education is needed on proper use of binders. We should continue to educate on appropriate positioning and the use of pelvic binders. For me, this study is not large enough to convince that we should go away from binder use. We need more data before we abandon the pelvic binder.
Alonja Reiter, André Strahl, Sarina Kothe, Markus Pleizier, Karl-Heinz Frosch, Konrad Mader, Annika Hättich, Jakob Nüchtern, Christopher Cramer,
Does a prehospital applied pelvic binder improve patient survival?,
Injury,
2024,
111392,
ISSN 0020-1383,
Category: Administration
Keywords: Transfer, surgery, scoping review, further research (PubMed Search)
Posted: 1/28/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 2/11/2024)
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These authors performed a scoping review of English language studies involving United States general surgery patients that required transfer to another facility looking at timing of transfer, triage guidelines, and mode of transport . They concluded: “There were mixed results for the impact of transfer timing on outcomes with heterogeneous definitions of delay and populations. Triage guidelines for EGS transfer were consensus or expert opinion. No studies were identified addressing the mode of interfacility EGS transfer.” More research is needed in the area concerning timing, triage and mode of transport for these patients.
Silver, David S. MD, MPH; Teng, Cindy MD; Brown, Joshua B. MD, MSc. Timing, triage, and mode of emergency general surgery interfacility transfers in the United States: A scoping review. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery 95(6):p 969-974, December 2023. | DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000004011
Category: Trauma
Keywords: Ct, head injury, geriatric (PubMed Search)
Posted: 1/28/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 2/4/2024)
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In this prospective study looking at geriatric patients with unknown head injury vs. known head injury, the unknown head injury group had an ICH 1.5%, neurosurgical intervention 0.3% and delayed ICH 0.1% when compared to known head injury (10.5%, 1.2% and 0.7% respectively). The authors concluded that the risk of ICH was high enough in uncertain head injury patients to warrant scanning.
Turchiaro ML Jr, Solano JJ, Clayton LM, Hughes PG, Shih RD, Alter SM. Computed Tomography Imaging of Geriatric Patients with Uncertain Head Trauma. J Emerg Med. 2023 Dec;65(6):e511-e516. doi: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2023.07.009. Epub 2023 Jul 26. PMID: 37838489.
Category: Trauma
Keywords: Prediction, surprise question, trauma, mortality (PubMed Search)
Posted: 1/28/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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The question “Would I be surprised if the patient died within the next year” has been validated as a tool to predict patients with a limited life expectancy. This study looked at trauma team members’ ability to use this question to predict one year mortality. Trauma team members over estimated mortality in this study.
Hoffman, Melissa Red MD, ND; Slivinski, Andrea DNP, APRN; Shen, Yan PhD; Watts, Dorraine D. PhD; Wyse, Ransom J. MPH; Garland, Jeneva M. PharmD; Fakhry, Samir M. MD, FACS; the Surprise Question in Trauma Research Group. Would you be surprised? Prospective multicenter study of the Surprise Question as a screening tool to predict mortality in trauma patients. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery 96(1):p 35-43, January 2024. | DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000004151
Category: Administration
Keywords: Risk, diagnostic error (PubMed Search)
Posted: 1/21/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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From the Canadian Medical Protective Association looking at 5 years of closed medical legal cases. This fits with previous risk management data and should give us pause when treating these conditions.
Published November 2023
Category: Trauma
Keywords: elder, Trauma, delirium, confusion (PubMed Search)
Posted: 1/14/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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Imagine lying in a bed staring at the ceiling and these fuzzy faces looking down on you clearly saying something to you but you can't hear them while your hip and pelvis are hurting worse than anything you have ever felt. That's what many of our fall from standing elderly patients experience in emergency departments on a regular basis. Do not remove glasses or hearing aides from your elderly patients. Work with our EMS colleagues to make it a practice to bring glasses and hearing aides along from the scene. Speak slowly and get close to their ear to help if necessary. That confusion, delirium or dementia you assume this patient has is actually just hearing impairment and poor vision.
Category: Trauma
Posted: 1/7/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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Approaching patients based on their frailty, not their age, leads to better medical decision making. A recent best practice guideline from the American College of Surgeons sums up frailty:
“It is well recognized that aging is associated with physiological decline, but this decline is not uniform across all individuals or even across one individual’s organ systems. Frailty is a geriatric syndrome, clinically distinct from age, comorbidity, and functional disability, characterized by age- associated depletion of physiological reserves that leads
to a state of augmented vulnerability to physical stressors and a diminished ability to recover from illnesses.” A trauma specific frailty index exists to identify these high risk patients.
BEST PRACTICES GUIDELINES
GERIATRIC TRAUMA
MANAGEMENT
November 2023
Trauma
Programs
American College of Surgeons
https://www.facs.org/media/ubyj2ubl/best-practices-guidelines-geriatric-trauma.pdf
Category: Administration
Posted: 1/6/2024 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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Since 2014, Medicare has payed for inpatient services for Medicare patients who’s admitting physician noted that hospital stay required at least 48 hours (measured as 2 midnights) or required specialty care that could not be performed as an out patient. This rule now will apply to Medicare Advantage insurance patients as well. Physicians will need to document their reasoning why a patient’s stay will likely require two midnights.
Jakob Emerson - Updated Friday, December 29th, 2023 Becker’s Payer Issues
Category: Administration
Keywords: Personal growth. (PubMed Search)
Posted: 12/31/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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As the calendar flips to a new year, consider not setting goals or resolutions. Studies show unmet goals or having too many half finished projects leads to increased stress, anxiety and depression. Instead, consider approaching the new year looking for growth, introspection, and striving to achieve excellence. Understanding the why and what motivates you will lead to the correct what and how. Here are some questions to get you thinking about the why. May your New Year be filled with growth and excellence!
Category: Pharmacology & Therapeutics
Posted: 12/30/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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For the agitated geriatric patient, if verbal deescalation, distraction, and providing a safe quiet area do not work and you require chemical sedation use oral antipsychotics first. Follow this with IV or IM antipsychotics. Avoid benzodiazepines due to often worsening delirium or respiratory depression. For dosing, start low and go slow.
Emergency Medicine Clinics VOLUME 42, ISSUE 1, P135-149, FEBRUARY 2024
Michelle A. Fischer, MD, MPH Monica Corsetti, MD
Published:July 31, 2023DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emc.2023.06.016
Category: Trauma
Posted: 12/24/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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NEXUS criteria for blunt chest trauma patients who are over 14 years old, not intubated:
>60 years old
rapid deceleration defined as fall > 6 meters or motor vehicle crash >64 km/hour
chest pain
intoxication
abnormal alertness or mental status
distracting painful injury
tenderness to chest wall palpation
If abnormal chest X-Ray proceed to chest CT. Negative predictive value of 99.9% excluding major injury.
Category: Trauma
Posted: 12/17/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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This commentary offers another reminder that there is significant bias in which trauma patients receive alcohol testing when that decision is made on a case by case basis. Age, sex, socioeconomic, race, injury pattern, all have been shown to influence provider ordering. Trauma systems should have pre-defined ordering criteria to eliminate this bias. The importance of gathering this testing information is to provide intervention and treatment to those in need. First we have to identify all patients in need.
Vanessa Cubas1, David N Naumann Addressing biases in alcohol testing for trauma patients: what is the solution? Emergency Medicine Journal. Volume 40 Issue 11. https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2023-213419
Category: Trauma
Keywords: soft tissue injury, trauma, (PubMed Search)
Posted: 12/10/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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Here are three good resources to learn about a soft tissue injury seen in high velocity blunt trauma patients called Morel-Lavallee lessions.
“Morel Lavallee lesions are soft tissue injuries seen in high-velocity trauma and are usually associated with underlying fractures of the pelvis, acetabulum, or proximal femur. Often these injuries are not immediately diagnosed due to the distracting concomitant bony injuries. However, identification of such injuries is important as they may pose as an independent risk factor for surgical site infection. The clinical findings include soft tissue swelling, bruise/ ecchymosis, fluctuance, and compressibility in the swelling. The diagnosis is usually established on physical examination, however, radiological investigations including ultrasonography and CT might help. The management options include nonoperative treatment, percutaneous aspiration, and open debridement.” 1
“Morel-Lavallée lesions are often the result of skin and subcutaneous tissue quickly tearing away from the underlying fascia. This allows a range of fluids to fill the space in the form of hemolymphatic masses. The two most common sites are the prepatellar plate of the knee and the lateral fascia of the hip.” 2
“ML lesion is often undiagnosed during initial presentation of a trauma patient, and emergency physicians and trauma surgeons should be aware of the possibility of occurrence of this injury. MRI is the imaging modality of choice, and the presence or absence of a capsule is an important imaging finding that guides appropriate therapy. Early diagnosis and management will help prevent long-term morbidity and complications in these patients.”3
Category: Trauma
Keywords: prehospital, EDTCO2, mortality (PubMed Search)
Posted: 12/3/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
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A retrospective study of 2 years of data from 24 trauma centers looking at end tidal CO2 as a predictor of mortality in trauma patients found:
"A total of 1,324 patients were enrolled. ETCO2 was better in predicting mortality than shock index (SI) and systolic blood pressure (SBP). Prehospital lowest ETCO2 , SBP , and SI were all predictive of Mass Transfusion."
Another data point to consider when setting up trauma triage protocols and looking for patients who will require intensive interventions early.
Campion EM, Cralley A, Sauaia A, Buchheit RC, Brown AT, Spalding MC, LaRiccia A, Moore S, Tann K, Leskovan J, Camazine M, Barnes SL, Otaibi B, Hazelton JP, Jacobson LE, Williams J, Castillo R, Stewart NJ, Elterman JB, Zier L, Goodman M, Elson N, Miner J, Hardman C, Kapoen C, Mendoza AE, Schellenberg M, Benjamin E, Wakam GK, Alam HB, Kornblith LZ, Callcut RA, Coleman LE, Shatz DV, Burruss S, Linn AC, Perea L, Morgan M, Schroeppel TJ, Stillman Z, Carrick MM, Gomez MF, Berne JD, McIntyre RC, Urban S, Nahmias J, Tay E, Cohen M, Moore EE, McVaney K, Burlew CC. Prehospital end-tidal carbon dioxide is predictive of death and massive transfusion in injured patients: An Eastern Association for Surgery of Trauma multicenter trial. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2022 Feb 1;92(2):355-361. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000003447. PMID: 34686640.
Category: Trauma
Keywords: Geriatric, trauma, mortality, risk factors (PubMed Search)
Posted: 11/26/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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A chart review of 1300 patients over age 65 admitted to the trauma service, arrived as a trauma activation, or had an injury severity score over 12 over a 6 year period looking at 30 day mortality found:
"five factors associated with increased 30-day mortality in older trauma patients: GCS < 15, ISS > 15, age ≥ 85 years, anticoagulation, and multimorbidity."
Fall from standing was the leading cause of trauma
Again, fragility is the index we should be using, not age alone. This study is limited in its retrospective chart review nature. Prospective research in the area of geriatric trauma is needed. Until then, assess those over age 65 for risk factors associated with fragility and treat accordingly.
Yadav, K., Lampron, J., Nadj, R. et al.Predictors of mortality among older major trauma patients. Can J Emerg Med 25, 865–872 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s43678-023-00597-w
Category: Trauma
Keywords: Geriatric, older person, trauma, super-geriatric (PubMed Search)
Posted: 11/23/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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This retrospective study looked at trauma patients over age 65 and divided them into age ranges 65-80 (geriatric) and 80 plus (super-geriatric). They then looked at mechanusm of injury, mortality, interventions,etc. What they found was ages 65-80 were more likely to be injured in motor vehicle crashes vs. falls for those over 80. Those over 80 received less interventions including hemmorhage control surgery and had much higher levels of withdrawal of care.
This study highlights that the geriatric population is not as a monolithic group over age 65, but more nuanced by various age ranges over 65. Research going forward should be adjusted to these nuanced age ranges. Out treatment approaches should be adjusted in geriatric vs. super-geriatric patients as well.
El-Qawaqzeh K, Anand T, Alizai Q, Colosimo C, Hosseinpour H, Spencer A, Ditillo M, Magnotti LJ, Stewart C, Joseph B. Trauma in the Geriatric and the Super-Geriatric: Should They Be Treated the Same? J Surg Res. 2024 Jan;293:316-326. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2023.09.015. Epub 2023 Oct 6. PMID: 37806217.
Category: Trauma
Keywords: Reverse shock index, Peds trauma, prediction (PubMed Search)
Posted: 11/18/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
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This small study suggests using reverse shock index times the Glasgow Comma Scake score may give a prognostication on pediatric trauma severity and resource utilization.
Reppucci, Marina L. MD; et al.
Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery 95(3):p 347-353, September 2023. | DOI:
Category: Trauma
Keywords: Brain injury, ketamine ICP (PubMed Search)
Posted: 11/12/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
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This pediatric ICU study measured ICP during and after ketamine infusion. There was no increase in ICP associated with the ketamine infusion. This small study adds to the data that ketamine is safe in pediatric brain injured patients.
Laws, Jennifer C. MD1; Vance, E. Haley DNP2; Betters, Kristina A. MD1; Anderson, Jessica J. PharmD3; Fleishman, Sydney BA4; Bonfield, Christopher M. MD2; Wellons, John C. III MD, MSPH2,5; Xu, Meng MS6; Slaughter, James C. DrPH6; Giuse, Dario A. Dr.Ing7; Patel, Neal MD, MPH5,7; Jordan, Lori C. MD, PhD8; Wolf, Michael S. MD1,2
Category: Trauma
Keywords: ECMO, Trauma, Survivial (PubMed Search)
Posted: 10/14/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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This systematic review and analysis found in 1822 trauma patients treated with ECMO:
-Overall 66% survival to discharge
-VV ECMO was significantly superior to VA ECMO
-Mean age was 35 years. Typical of ECMO use in trauma is younger healthier patients are chosen to receive ECMO
“ECMO is not a routine life-saving intervention following trauma, but rather a salvage therapy that effectively replaces conventional treatment for young, healthy patients when conventional methods fail. Its complexity requires a multidisciplinary healthcare team and sufficient resources for optimal implementation.”
Zhang et al. European Journal of Medical Research (2023) 28:412 https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-023-01390-2
Category: Trauma
Keywords: transfusion, mass hemorrhage protocol, cryoprecipitate (PubMed Search)
Posted: 10/14/2023 by Robert Flint, MD
(Updated: 4/3/2025)
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This large UK and US study looked at the addition of high dose cryoprecipitate to mass transfusion protocols and found: “Among patients with trauma and bleeding who required activation of a major hemorrhage protocol, the addition of early and empirical high-dose cryoprecipitate to standard care did not improve all cause 28-day mortality.”
Davenport R, Curry N, Fox EE, et al. Early and Empirical High-Dose Cryoprecipitate for Hemorrhage After Traumatic Injury: The CRYOSTAT-2 Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. Published online October 12, 2023. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.21019