2015, Volume 8, Issue Spec Issue, pp 103 – 109

Study regarding the survival of patients suffering a traumatic cardiac arrest

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Authors and Affiliations

Correspondence to: Valentin Georgescu, MD, PhD, Senior Emergency Physician, Specialist Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, “Carol Davila” Nephrology Hospital, Bucharest, 4 Calea Grivitei Street, District 1, Bucharest, Romania Mobile phone: +40744 395 601, E-mail: georgescu.valentin@yahoo.com

Abstract

Severe trauma is the most frequent cause of death in young people, in civilized countries with major social and vital costs. The speed of diagnostic decision making and the precocity of treatment approaches are both essential and depend on the specialists’ colaboration.

The present study aims to emphasize the actual situation of medical interventions in case of cardiorespiratory arrest due to trauma. 1387 patients who suffered a cardio respiratory arrest both traumatic and non-traumatic were included in order to point out the place of traumatic arrest.

Resuscitation of such patients is considered useless and resource consumer by many trauma practitioners who are reporting survival rates of 0%-3.5%. As the determinant of lesions, trauma etiology was as it follows car accidents – 43%, high falls – 30%, suicidal attempts – 3%, domestic violence – 3%, other causes – 21%.

Hypovolemia remains the major cause of cardiac arrest and death and that is why the efforts of emergency providers (trauma team) must be oriented towards “hidden death” in order to avoid it. This condition could be revealed and solved easier with minimal diagnostic and therapeutic maneuvers in the emergency department.

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About this article

PMC ID: 4564027
PubMed ID: 26366226
DOI: 

Article Publishing Date (print): 2015
Available Online: 

Journal information

ISSN Printing: 1844-122X
ISSN Online: 1844-3117
Journal Title: Journal of Medicine and Life

Copyright License: Open Access

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.


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