From the Division of Trauma, Emergency Surgery and Surgical Critical Care (M.J.D., J.B., G.V., M.A.D., J.H., D.R.K.), Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston; and Arsenal Medical, Inc. (A.R., J.M., U.S.), Watertown, Massachusetts.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2014 Jul;77(1):73-7. doi: 10.1097/TA.0000000000000263.
Noncompressible abdominal bleeding is a significant cause of preventable death on the battlefield and in the civilian setting, with no effective therapies available at point of injury. We previously reported that a self-expanding polyurethane foam significantly improved survival in a lethal hepatoportal injury model of massive venous hemorrhage. In this study, we hypothesized that foam treatment could improve survival in a lethal iliac artery injury model in noncoagulopathic swine.
In swine with a closed abdomen, an iliac artery transection was created, resulting in massive noncompressible exsanguination. After injury, animals were treated with damage-control fluid resuscitation alone (n = 14) or foam treatment in addition to fluids. Two doses of foam treatment were studied: 100 mL (n = 12) and 120 mL (n = 13); all animals were monitored for 3 hours or until death.
Foam treatment at both doses resulted in a significant survival benefit and reduction in hemorrhage rate relative to the control group. Median survival time was 135 minutes and 175 minutes for the 120-mL and 100-mL doses, compared with 32 minutes in the control group (p < 0.001 for both groups). Foam resulted in an immediate, persistent improvement in mean arterial pressure and a transient increase in intra-abdominal pressure. The median hemorrhage rate was 0.27 g/kg per minute in the 120-mL group and 0.23 g/kg per minute in the 100-mL group, compared with 1.4 g/kg per minute in the control group (p = 0.003 and 0.006, respectively, as compared with the control).
Self-expanding foam treatment significantly improves survival in an otherwise lethal, noncompressible, massive, arterial injury. This treatment may provide a prehospital intervention for control of noncompressible abdominal hemorrhage.
非压迫性腹部出血是战场和民用环境中可预防死亡的一个重要原因,在受伤时没有有效的治疗方法。我们之前报告称,自膨式聚氨酯泡沫显著提高了大量静脉出血性肝门静脉损伤模型的存活率。在这项研究中,我们假设泡沫治疗可以改善非凝血性猪的致命性髂动脉损伤模型的存活率。
在腹部闭合的猪中,进行了髂动脉横断术,导致大量非压迫性出血。损伤后,动物仅接受损伤控制性液体复苏(n = 14)或在液体复苏的基础上进行泡沫治疗。研究了两种剂量的泡沫治疗:100 mL(n = 12)和 120 mL(n = 13);所有动物均监测 3 小时或直至死亡。
两种剂量的泡沫治疗均显著提高了存活率,并减少了出血率,与对照组相比具有统计学意义。120 mL 剂量和 100 mL 剂量的中位存活时间分别为 135 分钟和 175 分钟,而对照组为 32 分钟(两组均 p < 0.001)。泡沫治疗立即产生持续的平均动脉压改善,并短暂增加腹腔内压。120 mL 组的中位出血量为 0.27 g/kg/min,100 mL 组为 0.23 g/kg/min,而对照组为 1.4 g/kg/min(与对照组相比,p = 0.003 和 0.006)。
自膨式泡沫治疗显著提高了非压迫性、大量、动脉性损伤的致命性。这种治疗方法可能为控制非压迫性腹部出血提供一种院前干预措施。