Trending Fibrinolytic Dysregulation Fibrinolysis Shutdown in the Days After Injury Is Associated With Poor Outcome in Severely Injured Children

被引:51
|
作者
Leeper, Christine M. [1 ,2 ]
Neal, Matthew D. [1 ]
McKenna, Christine J. [2 ]
Gaines, Barbara A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Surg, Med Ctr, Div Gen Surg & Trauma, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[2] UPMC, Childrens Hosp Pittsburgh, 7th Floor,Fac Pavil,One Childrens Hosp Dr, Pittsburgh, PA 15224 USA
关键词
coagulopathy; massive transfusion; pediatric; trauma; traumatic brain injury; ADMISSION RAPID THROMBELASTOGRAPHY; ACUTE TRAUMATIC COAGULOPATHY; PRINCIPAL COMPONENT ANALYSIS; PEDIATRIC TRAUMA; MORTALITY; CHILDREN; COAGULATION; TIME; HYPERFIBRINOLYSIS; PREVALENCE;
D O I
10.1097/SLA.0000000000002355
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: To trend fibrinolysis after injury and determine the influence of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and massive transfusion on fibrinolysis status. Background: Admission fibrinolytic derangement is common in injured children and adults, and is associated with poor outcome. No studies examine fibrinolysis days after injury. Methods: Prospective study of severely injured children at a level 1 pediatric trauma center. Rapid thromboelastography was obtained on admission and daily for up to 7 days. Standard definitions of hyperfibrinolysis (HF; LY30 >= 3), fibrinolysis shutdown (SD; LY30 <= 0.8), and normal (LY30 = 0.9-2.9) were applied. Antifibrinolytic use was documented. Outcomes were death, disability, and thromboembolic complications. Wilcoxon rank-sum and Fisher exact tests were performed. Exploratory subgroups included massively transfused and severe TBI patients. Results: In all, 83 patients were analyzed with median (interquartile ranges) age 8 (4-12) and Injury Severity Score 22 (13-34), 73.5% blunt mechanism, 47% severe TBI, 20.5% massively transfused. Outcomes were 14.5% mortality, 43.7% disability, and 9.8% deep vein thrombosis. Remaining in or trending to SD was associated with death (P = 0.007), disability (P = 0.012), and deep vein thrombosis (P = 0.048). Median LY30 was lower on post-trauma day (PTD) 1 to PTD4 in patients with poor compared with good outcome; median LY30 was lower on PTD1 to PTD3 in TBI patients compared with non-TBI patients. HF without associated shutdown was not related to poor outcome, but extreme HF (LY30 >30%, n = 3) was lethal. Also, 50% of massively transfused patients in hemorrhagic shock demonstrated SD physiology on admission. All with HF (fc31.2%) corrected after hemostatic resuscitation without tranexamic acid. Conclusions: Fibrinolysis shutdown is common postinjury and predicts poor outcomes. Severe TBI is associated with sustained shutdown. Empiric anti-fibrinolytics for children should be questioned; thromboelastography-directed selective use should be considered for documented HF.
引用
收藏
页码:508 / 515
页数:8
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [1] Persistent Fibrinolysis Shutdown Is Associated with Increased Mortality in Severely Injured Trauma Patients
    Meizoso, Jonathan P.
    Karcutskie, Charles A.
    Ray, Juliet J.
    Namias, Nicholas
    Schulman, Carl I.
    Proctor, Kenneth G.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2017, 224 (04) : 575 - 582
  • [2] Acute Fibrinolysis Shutdown after Injury Occurs Frequently and Increases Mortality: A Multicenter Evaluation of 2,540 Severely Injured Patients
    Moore, Hunter B.
    Moore, Ernest E.
    Liras, Ioannis N.
    Gonzalez, Eduardo
    Harvin, John A.
    Holcomb, John B.
    Sauaia, Angela
    Cotton, Bryan A.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2016, 222 (04) : 347 - 355
  • [3] Elucidating the molecular mechanisms of fibrinolytic shutdown after severe injury: The role of thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor
    Coleman, Julia R.
    Moore, Ernest E.
    Kelher, Marguerite R.
    Jones, Kenneth
    Cohen, Mitchell J.
    Banerjee, Anirban
    Silliman, Christopher C.
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND ACUTE CARE SURGERY, 2023, 94 (06) : 857 - 862
  • [4] Brief Episodes of Intracranial Hypertension and Cerebral Hypoperfusion Are Associated With Poor Functional Outcome After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
    Stein, Deborah M.
    Hu, Peter F.
    Brenner, Megan
    Sheth, Kevin N.
    Liu, Keng-Hao
    Xiong, Wei
    Aarabi, Bizhan
    Scalea, Thomas M.
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2011, 71 (02): : 364 - 373
  • [5] Characteristics, image findings and clinical outcome of moderate and severe traumatic brain injury among severely injured children: a population-based cohort study
    Clemens Weber
    Joakim Stray Andreassen
    Maziar Behbahani
    Kenneth Thorsen
    Kjetil Søreide
    European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery, 2022, 48 : 4473 - 4480
  • [6] Characteristics, image findings and clinical outcome of moderate and severe traumatic brain injury among severely injured children: a population-based cohort study
    Weber, Clemens
    Andreassen, Joakim Stray
    Behbahani, Maziar
    Thorsen, Kenneth
    Soreide, Kjetil
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND EMERGENCY SURGERY, 2022, 48 (06) : 4473 - 4480
  • [7] Cytotoxic Edema Associated with Hemorrhage Predicts Poor Outcome after Traumatic Brain Injury
    Turtzo, L. Christine
    Luby, Marie
    Jikaria, Neekita
    Griffin, Allison Diane
    Greenman, Danielle
    Bokkers, Reinoud P. H.
    Parikh, Gunjan
    Peterkin, Nicole
    Whiting, Mark
    Latour, Lawrence L.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2021, 38 (22) : 3107 - 3118
  • [8] Analysis of Risk Factors Associated With Poor Outcome in Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome After Treatment in Children: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
    Hun, Marady
    Tian, Jidong
    Xie, Min
    She, Zhou
    Abdirahman, Amin Sheikh
    Han, Phanna
    Wan, Wuqing
    Wen, Chuan
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2020, 11
  • [9] Initiating Nutritional Support Before 72 Hours Is Associated With Favorable Outcome After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury in Children: A Secondary Analysis of a Randomized, Controlled Trial of Therapeutic Hypothermia
    Meinert, Elizabeth
    Bell, Michael J.
    Buttram, Sandra
    Kochanek, Patrick M.
    Balasubramani, Goundappa K.
    Wisniewski, Stephen R.
    Adelson, P. David
    PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2018, 19 (04) : 345 - 352