The Impact of Time to Major Intervention and Delayed Care for Patients with Traumatic Hemorrhage
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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Abstract
Background: The specific clinical impact of delays to hemostatic intervention in trauma is under-explored.
Objectives: Investigate the current understanding of the impact of increasing time to hemostasis and assess its relationship with clinical outcomes.
Methods: We conducted a systematic review to characterize existing definitions of delayed hemostasis and its clinical sequelae. We conducted a cohort study of 147 trauma patients to investigate the impact of increased time to hemostasis.
Results: Most studies demonstrated significant relationships between time to hemostasis and mortality, despite heterogeneity. The cohort study failed to demonstrate a significant association between time to hemostasis and mortality.
Discussion: The thesis has taken steps to investigate time to hemostasis with appropriate methodology. The findings are limited by sample size and confounding by indication.
Conclusions: There remains a substantial gap in the literature with respect to understanding the impact of increasing time to hemostasis in trauma and larger studies are needed.
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Keywords
trauma, bleeding, surgery, interventional radiology, delay
