A Novel Approach to Identify Polytraumatized Patients in Extremis

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Abstract

Introduction. Due to the fact that early objective identification of polytraumatized patients in extremis is crucial for carrying out immediate life-saving measures, our objectives were to provide and scrutinize a definition that results in a particularly high mortality rate and to identify predictors of mortality in this group. Materials and Methods. A polytraumatized patient (ISS ≥ 16) was classified "in extremis" if five out of seven parameters (arterial paCO2 > 50 mmHg, hemoglobin < 9.5 g/dl, pH value < 7.2, lactate level > 4 mmol/l, base excess 1, and Horowitz index < 300) were met. By applying this definition, polytraumatized patients (age ≥ 18 years), admitted to our level I trauma center within a time period of three years, were retrospectively allocated to the "in extremis" group and to an age-, gender-, and ISS-matched "non-in extremis" group for comparison. Results. Out of 64 polytraumatized patients (mean ISS, 43.6), who formed the "in extremis" group, 36 patients (56.3%) died, thus revealing a threefold higher mortality rate than in the matched group (18.9%). Within the "in extremis" group, age and ISS were identified as predictors of mortality. Conclusion. Our definition might serve as a valuable early warning score or at least an impetus for defining polytraumatized patients in extremis in clinical practice.

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APA

Negrin, L. L., Antoni, A., Hajdu, S., & Heinz, T. (2018). A Novel Approach to Identify Polytraumatized Patients in Extremis. BioMed Research International, 2018. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/7320158

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