Critical Innovations LLC, Los Angeles, California; Department of Emergency Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California; Department of Emergency Medicine, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, California; Department of Epidemiology, UCLA - Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles, California.
Department of Surgery, Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine, Portland, Oregon; Department of Surgery, New York Presbyterian Queens, New York City, New York.
J Surg Res. 2021 Mar;259:175-181. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2020.11.039. Epub 2020 Dec 5.
Noncompressible torso hemorrhage (NCTH) is a leading cause of traumatic exsanguination, requiring emergent damage control surgery performed by a highly trained surgeon in a sterile operating environment. A self-expanding, intraabdominally deployed, thermoreversible foam is one proposed method to potentially task shift temporizing hemostasis to earlier providers and additional settings. The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility of using Fast Onset Abdominal Management (FOAM) in a lethal swine model of NCTH.
This was a proof-of-concept study comparing FOAM intervention in large Yorkshire swine to historical control animals in the established Ross-Burns model of NCTH. After animal preparation, a Grade IV liver laceration was surgically induced, followed by a free bleed period of 10 min. FOAM was then deployed to a goal intraabdominal pressure of 60 mm Hg for 5 min, followed by a total 60-min observation period following injury.
At the end of the experiment, the FOAM agent was found to be distributed throughout the peritoneal cavity in all animals, without signs of iatrogenic injury. The FOAM group demonstrated a significantly higher mean arterial pressure compared with historical controls and a trend toward improved survival: 82% (9/11) compared with 50% for controls (7/14; P = 0.082).
This is the first study to describe the use of a thermoresponsive foam to manage NCTH and successfully demonstrated proof-of-concept feasibility of FOAM deployment. These results provide strong support for future, higher-powered studies to confirm improved survival with this novel intervention.
非压缩性躯干出血(NCTH)是创伤性出血的主要原因,需要由经过高度培训的外科医生在无菌手术环境中紧急实施损伤控制性手术。一种自扩张的、腹腔内部署的、温度可逆的泡沫是一种潜在的临时止血方法,可将任务转移到更早的提供者和其他环境。本研究的目的是评估在致命性 NCTH 猪模型中使用快速腹部管理(FOAM)的可行性。
这是一项概念验证研究,比较了 FOAM 干预在大型约克夏猪与 NCTH 既定 Ross-Burns 模型中的历史对照动物。动物准备后,通过手术诱导 IV 级肝裂伤,然后进行 10 分钟的自由出血期。然后将 FOAM 部署到 60mmHg 的目标腹腔内压,持续 5 分钟,然后在受伤后进行总共 60 分钟的观察期。
在实验结束时,FOAM 剂被发现分布在所有动物的整个腹腔内,没有医源性损伤的迹象。FOAM 组的平均动脉压明显高于历史对照组,并且存活趋势更好:82%(9/11)与对照组的 50%(7/14;P=0.082)。
这是第一项描述使用热响应性泡沫来治疗 NCTH 的研究,并成功地证明了 FOAM 部署的概念验证可行性。这些结果为未来更高功率的研究提供了强有力的支持,以确认这种新干预措施的存活改善。