1. Temporary intravascular shunts after civilian arterial injury: A prospective multicenter Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma study
- Author
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Mark J. Seamon, Margaret C. Moore, Richard D. Betzold, Christina Tran, Stephanie D. Talutis, Lily Tung, Atlee Melillo, Michael C. Smith, Jason D Pasley, Kenji Inaba, Alexis Cralley, Joshua P. Hazelton, Kwang Kim, Bradley M. Dennis, Jae Moo Lee, Dennis Y. Kim, Tejal S. Brahmbhatt, Ryan A. Lawless, Jennifer Leonard, Noelle Saillant, and Jennie S Kim
- Subjects
Male ,Damage control ,Shunt placement ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Ischemia ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Trauma Centers ,medicine ,Humans ,Popliteal Artery ,Prospective Studies ,Arterial injury ,Retrospective Studies ,General Environmental Science ,030222 orthopedics ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Vascular System Injuries ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Surgery ,Multicenter study ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business ,Vascular Surgical Procedures ,Shunt (electrical) - Abstract
We sought to determine the impact of the indication for shunt placement on shunt-related outcomes after major arterial injuries. We hypothesized that a shunt placed for damage control indications would be associated with an increase in shunt-related complications including shunt dislodgement, thrombosis, or distal ischemia.A prospective, multicenter study (eleven level one US trauma centers) of all adult trauma patients undergoing temporary intravascular shunts (TIVS) after arterial injury was undertaken (January 2017-May 2019). Exclusion criteria included age15years, shunt placement distal to popliteal/brachial arteries, isolated venous shunts, and death before shunt removal. Clinical variables were compared by indication and shunt-related complications. The primary endpoint was TIVS complications (thrombosis, migration, distal ischemia).The 66 patients who underwent TIVS were primarily young (30years [IQR 22-36]) men (85%), severely injured (ISS 17 [10-25]) by penetrating mechanisms (59%), and had their shunts placed for damage control (41%). After a median SDT of 198min [89-622], 9% experienced shunt-related complications. Compared by shunt placement indication (damage control shunts [n=27] compared to non-damage control shunts [n=39]), there were no differences in gender, mechanism, extremity AIS, MESS score, fractures, or surgeon specialty between the two groups (all p0.05). Patients with shunts placed for damage control indications had more severe injuries (ISS 23.5 compared to 13; SBP 100 compared to 129; GCS 11 compared to 15; lactate 11.5 compared to 3.6; all p0.05), and had more frequent shunt complication predictors, but damage control shunts did not have significantly more TIVS complications (11.1% compared to 7.7%, p=0.658). Shunt complication patients were discharged home less often (33% vs 65%; p0.05) but all survived.Shunts placed for damage control indications were not associated with shunt complications in this prospective, multicenter study.
- Published
- 2021
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