Early management of vascular injury, starting at the field, is imperative for survival no less than any operative maneuver. Contemporary prehospital management of vascular trauma, including appropriate fluid and volume infusion, tourniquets, and hemostatic agents, has reversed the historically known limb hemorrhage as a leading cause of death. In this context, damage control (DC) surgery has evolved to DC resuscitation (DCR) as an overarching concept that draws together preoperative and operative interventions aiming at rapidly reducing bleeding from vascular disruption, optimizing oxygenation, and clinical outcomes. This review addresses contemporary DCR techniques from the prehospital to the surgical setting, focusing on civilian vascular...
Care for the polytraumatized patient in the pre-hospital phase has improved rapidly in recent years....
Background: Vascular trauma can threaten both limb as well as life of the patient. Combat-related va...
Urgent surgery should not be performed preferably for at least 72 hours after a cardiac arrest to mi...
Objectives: Major vascular injury is a leading cause of potentially preventable hemorrhagic death in...
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) is emerging as a standard practice in civilian and military traum...
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) is a strategy for resuscitating patients from hemorrhagic shock t...
Introduction; Trauma and Traumatic injuries account for about 38% of the weight of surgical diseases...
Damage control surgery with the principles of expeditious control of hemorrhage and contamination, f...
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) is a strategy for resuscitating patients from hemorrhagic shock t...
A severely injured patient presents several unique challenges to an admitting trauma team. Not only ...
The highest goal in damage control surgery is to stop the bleeding. Major injuries to the vessels th...
AbstractThe early recognition and management of hemorrhage shock are among the most difficult tasks ...
Hemorrhage is the second most common cause of death among trauma patients and almost half of the d...
In less than twenty years, what began as a concept for the treatment of exsanguinating truncal traum...
Most surgeons have adopted damage control surgery for severely injured patients, in which the initia...
Care for the polytraumatized patient in the pre-hospital phase has improved rapidly in recent years....
Background: Vascular trauma can threaten both limb as well as life of the patient. Combat-related va...
Urgent surgery should not be performed preferably for at least 72 hours after a cardiac arrest to mi...
Objectives: Major vascular injury is a leading cause of potentially preventable hemorrhagic death in...
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) is emerging as a standard practice in civilian and military traum...
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) is a strategy for resuscitating patients from hemorrhagic shock t...
Introduction; Trauma and Traumatic injuries account for about 38% of the weight of surgical diseases...
Damage control surgery with the principles of expeditious control of hemorrhage and contamination, f...
Damage control resuscitation (DCR) is a strategy for resuscitating patients from hemorrhagic shock t...
A severely injured patient presents several unique challenges to an admitting trauma team. Not only ...
The highest goal in damage control surgery is to stop the bleeding. Major injuries to the vessels th...
AbstractThe early recognition and management of hemorrhage shock are among the most difficult tasks ...
Hemorrhage is the second most common cause of death among trauma patients and almost half of the d...
In less than twenty years, what began as a concept for the treatment of exsanguinating truncal traum...
Most surgeons have adopted damage control surgery for severely injured patients, in which the initia...
Care for the polytraumatized patient in the pre-hospital phase has improved rapidly in recent years....
Background: Vascular trauma can threaten both limb as well as life of the patient. Combat-related va...
Urgent surgery should not be performed preferably for at least 72 hours after a cardiac arrest to mi...