TY - JOUR
T1 - Disseminated intravascular coagulation or acute coagulopathy of trauma shock early after trauma? A prospective observational study
AU - Johansson, Per Ingemar
AU - Sorensen, Anne Marie
AU - Perner, Anders
AU - Welling, Karen-Lise
AU - Wanscher, Michael
AU - Larsen, Claus F
AU - Ostrowski, Sisse R
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: It is debated whether the early trauma induced coagulopathy (TIC) in severely injured patients reflects disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) with a fibrinolytic phenotype, acute coagulopathy of trauma shock (ACoTS) or yet other entities. This study investigated the prevalence of overt DIC and ACoTS in trauma patients and characterized these conditions based on their biomarker profiles. METHODS: Observational study at a single Level I Trauma Centre. Inclusion of 80 adult trauma patients ([greater than or equal to]18 years) who met criteria for full trauma team activation and had an arterial cannula inserted. Blood was sampled a median of 68 min (IQR 48-88) post-injury. Data on demography, biochemistry, injury severity score (ISS) and mortality were recorded. Plasma/serum was analyzed for biomarkers reflecting tissue/endothelial cell/glycocalyx damage (histone-complexed DNA fragments, Annexin V, thrombomodulin, syndecan-1), coagulation activation/inhibition (prothrombinfragment 1+2, thrombin/antithrombin-complexes, antithrombin, protein C, activated protein C, endothelial protein C receptor, protein S, tissue factor pathway inhibitor, vWF), factor consumption (fibrinogen, FXIII), fibrinolysis (D-dimer, tissue-type plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1) and inflammation (interleukin (IL)-6, terminal complement complex (sC5b-9)). Comparison of patients stratified according to presence or absence of overt DIC (ISTH criteria) or ACoTS (activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and/or international normalized ratio (INR) above normal reference). RESULTS: No patients had overt DIC whereas 15% had ACoTS. ACoTS patients had higher injury severity score (ISS), transfusion requirements and mortality (all P
AB - ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION: It is debated whether the early trauma induced coagulopathy (TIC) in severely injured patients reflects disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) with a fibrinolytic phenotype, acute coagulopathy of trauma shock (ACoTS) or yet other entities. This study investigated the prevalence of overt DIC and ACoTS in trauma patients and characterized these conditions based on their biomarker profiles. METHODS: Observational study at a single Level I Trauma Centre. Inclusion of 80 adult trauma patients ([greater than or equal to]18 years) who met criteria for full trauma team activation and had an arterial cannula inserted. Blood was sampled a median of 68 min (IQR 48-88) post-injury. Data on demography, biochemistry, injury severity score (ISS) and mortality were recorded. Plasma/serum was analyzed for biomarkers reflecting tissue/endothelial cell/glycocalyx damage (histone-complexed DNA fragments, Annexin V, thrombomodulin, syndecan-1), coagulation activation/inhibition (prothrombinfragment 1+2, thrombin/antithrombin-complexes, antithrombin, protein C, activated protein C, endothelial protein C receptor, protein S, tissue factor pathway inhibitor, vWF), factor consumption (fibrinogen, FXIII), fibrinolysis (D-dimer, tissue-type plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1) and inflammation (interleukin (IL)-6, terminal complement complex (sC5b-9)). Comparison of patients stratified according to presence or absence of overt DIC (ISTH criteria) or ACoTS (activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and/or international normalized ratio (INR) above normal reference). RESULTS: No patients had overt DIC whereas 15% had ACoTS. ACoTS patients had higher injury severity score (ISS), transfusion requirements and mortality (all P
U2 - 10.1186/cc10553
DO - 10.1186/cc10553
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1466-609X
VL - 15
SP - R272
JO - Critical Care (Online Edition)
JF - Critical Care (Online Edition)
IS - 6
ER -