US Army Institute of Surgical Research, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, USA.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2012 Dec;73(6 Suppl 5):S431-7. doi: 10.1097/TA.0b013e3182755dcc.
Critical evaluation of all aspects of combat casualty care, including mortality, with a special focus on the incidence and causes of potentially preventable deaths among US combat fatalities, is central to identifying gaps in knowledge, training, equipment, and execution of battlefield trauma care. The impetus to produce this analysis was to develop a comprehensive perspective of battlefield death, concentrating on deaths that occurred in the pre-medical treatment facility (pre-MTF) environment.
The Armed Forces Medical Examiner Service Mortality Surveillance Division was used to identify Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom combat casualties from October 2001 to June 2011 who died from injury in the deployed environment. The autopsy records, perimortem records, photographs on file, and Mortality Trauma Registry of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner Service were used to compile mechanism of injury, cause of injury, medical intervention performed, Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) score, and Injury Severity Score (ISS) on all lethal injuries. All data were used by the expert panel for the conduct of the potential for injury survivability assessment of this study.
For the study interval between October 2001 and June 2011, 4,596 battlefield fatalities were reviewed and analyzed. The stratification of mortality demonstrated that 87.3% of all injury mortality occurred in the pre-MTF environment. Of the pre-MTF deaths, 75.7% (n = 3,040) were classified as nonsurvivable, and 24.3% (n = 976) were deemed potentially survivable (PS). The injury/physiologic focus of PS acute mortality was largely associated with hemorrhage (90.9%). The site of lethal hemorrhage was truncal (67.3%), followed by junctional (19.2%) and peripheral-extremity (13.5%) hemorrhage.
Most battlefield casualties died of their injuries before ever reaching a surgeon. As most pre-MTF deaths are nonsurvivable, mitigation strategies to impact outcomes in this population need to be directed toward injury prevention. To significantly impact the outcome of combat casualties with PS injury, strategies must be developed to mitigate hemorrhage and optimize airway management or reduce the time interval between the battlefield point of injury and surgical intervention.Understanding battlefield mortality is a vital component of the military trauma system. Emphasis on this analysis should be placed on trauma system optimization, evidence-based improvements in Tactical Combat Casualty Care guidelines, data-driven research, and development to remediate gaps in care and relevant training and equipment enhancements that will increase the survivability of the fighting force.
对战斗伤员救治的各个方面进行严格评估,包括死亡率,特别关注美国战斗伤亡人员中潜在可预防死亡的发生率和原因,这是确定知识、训练、设备和战场创伤救治实施方面差距的关键。进行这项分析的动力是对战场死亡进行全面的了解,重点关注在医疗前治疗设施(pre-MTF)环境中发生的死亡。
利用武装部队法医服务死亡率监测司,确定 2001 年 10 月至 2011 年 6 月期间在部署环境中因伤死亡的伊拉克自由行动和持久自由行动战斗伤员。使用法医尸检记录、围手术期记录、存档照片和武装部队法医服务的创伤登记处,编译所有致命伤的受伤机制、受伤原因、进行的医疗干预、损伤严重程度评分(AIS)和创伤严重程度评分(ISS)。所有数据均由专家小组用于进行本研究的伤害生存能力评估。
在 2001 年 10 月至 2011 年 6 月的研究期间,共审查和分析了 4596 例战场死亡。死亡率分层表明,所有伤死中 87.3%发生在 pre-MTF 环境中。在 pre-MTF 死亡中,75.7%(n=3040)被归类为不可存活,24.3%(n=976)被认为是潜在可存活(PS)。PS 急性死亡率的损伤/生理焦点主要与出血有关(90.9%)。致命性出血的部位是躯干(67.3%),其次是交界处(19.2%)和外周-四肢(13.5%)出血。
大多数战场伤员在到达外科医生之前就因伤死亡。由于大多数 pre-MTF 死亡是不可存活的,因此需要制定减轻这一人群结局的策略,以预防伤害。要显著影响 PS 损伤的战斗伤员的结局,必须制定策略来减轻出血,优化气道管理,或减少战场受伤点与外科干预之间的时间间隔。了解战场死亡率是军事创伤系统的重要组成部分。应将重点放在创伤系统优化、战术战斗伤员救治指南的循证改进、数据驱动的研究以及弥补护理差距和相关培训和设备增强上,这将提高作战部队的生存能力。