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The Role of TEG and ROTEM in Damage Control Resuscitation

Authors :
Andrew W. Kirkpatrick
Carlos A. Ordoñez
Juan Duchesne
Artai Priouzram
Derek Roberts
Jason B Brill
Paula Ferrada
Tal M. Hörer
Mansoor Khan
Bruno Perreira
Megan Brenner
David S. Kauvar
Bryan A. Cotton
Source :
Shock (Augusta, Ga.)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2021.

Abstract

Trauma-induced coagulopathy is associated with very high mortality, and hemorrhage remains the leading preventable cause of death after injury. Directed methods to combat coagulopathy and attain hemostasis are needed. The available literature regarding viscoelastic testing, including thrombelastography (TEG) and rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM), was reviewed to provide clinically relevant guidance for emergency resuscitation. These tests predict massive transfusion and developing coagulopathy earlier than conventional coagulation testing, within 15 min using rapid testing. They can guide resuscitation after trauma, as well. TEG and ROTEM direct early transfusion of fresh frozen plasma when clinical gestalt has not activated a massive transfusion protocol. Reaction time and clotting time via these tests can also detect clinically significant levels of direct oral anticoagulants. Slowed clot kinetics suggest the need for transfusion of fibrinogen via concentrates or cryoprecipitate. Lowered clot strength can be corrected with platelets and fibrinogen. Finally, viscoelastic tests identify fibrinolysis, a finding associated with significantly increased mortality yet one that no conventional coagulation test can reliably detect. Using these parameters, guided resuscitation begins within minutes of a patient's arrival. A growing body of evidence suggests this approach may improve survival while reducing volumes of blood products transfused.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15400514 and 10732322
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Shock (Augusta, Ga.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....77c0ac8ae138adec08fb945a8965db6f