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Damage control resuscitation

Evan Leibner, Mark Andreae, Samuel M. Galvagno, Thomas M. Scalea

2020Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The United States Navy originally utilized the concept of damage control to describe the process of prioritizing the critical repairs needed to return a ship safely to shore during a maritime emergency. To pursue a completed repair would detract from the goal of saving the ship. This concept of damage control management in crisis is well suited to the care of the critically ill trauma patient, and has evolved into the standard of care. Damage control resuscitation is not one technique, but, rather, a group of strategies which address the lethal triad of coagulopathy, acidosis, and hypothermia. In this article, we describe this approach to trauma resuscitation and the supporting evidence base.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineResuscitationDamage control surgeryTranexamic acidDamage controlIntensive care medicineCoagulopathyThromboelastographyMajor traumaMedical emergencyAnesthesiaSurgeryPlateletBlood lossInternal medicineTrauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, ResuscitationCardiac Arrest and ResuscitationTrauma and Emergency Care Studies
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