Trauma:
The Golden Hour
Dennis Kim MD FRCS(C)
General Surgery
Trauma & Critical Care
POS Core Lecture Series
February 17 2009
Objectives
concept of a golden hour
pathophysiology of shock in the trauma
patient
resuscitation according to ATLS principles
overview
specifics
The Golden Hour
originated by R Adams Cowley
first sixty minutes after the occurrence of
multi-system trauma
victim's chances of survival are greatest if they
receive definitive care in the OR within the
first hour after a severe injury
The Golden Hour
recently, the validity of the golden hour as a
rigidly defined timeframe scrutinized
core principle of rapid intervention in trauma
cases remains universally accepted
The Golden Hour
"There is a golden hour between life and
death. If you are critically injured you have
less than 60 minutes to survive. You might not
die right then; it may be three days or two
weeks later -- but something has happened in
your body that is irreparable."
- R Adams Cowley
The Golden Hour
Time and Trauma Outcomes
no convincing studies that time to treatment
consistently leads to better outcome
outcome related to many factors including
reduced time between injury and definitive
care
Ann Surg. 2003;237(2):153-60
1. What is the most common cause of
shock in the trauma patient?
A) septic
B) cardiogenic
C) hemorrhagic
D) neurogenic
2. The most easily reversible cause of
shock in the trauma patient is:
A) hemorrhagic
B) neurogenic
C) tension pneumothorax
D) cardiac tamponade
3. The most commonly injured solid
intraabdominal organ in blunt trauma is:
A) liver
B) spleen
C) kidney
D) small bowel
4. The bloody vicious cycle of trauma
refers to:
A) bleeding, hypothermia, and acidosis
B) bleeding, hyperthermia, acidosis
C) transfusion, hypothermia, acidosis
D) transfusion, hypothermia, alkalosis
5. Hemorrhagic shock is usually caused
by bleeding into or from:
A) abdomen
B) pelvis
C) chest
D) head
E) all of the above
F) A,B,C
The Golden Hour
Shock Pathophysiology
inadequate organ perfusion and tissue
oxygenation
3 factors determine:
1. oxygen content
2. oxygen delivery
3. distribution
The Golden Hour
Shock Pathophysiology
prolonged hypoperfusion creates a vicious
cycle of ischemia and shock
2 most important steps in managing shock:
1. recognition
2. treatment
The Golden Hour
Rapid Resuscitation
restores circulating volume
improves oxygen delivery
prevents cellular ischemia and tissue necrosis
prevents onset of secondary cellular injury
prevents onset of MODS
The Golden Hour
What should we be doing?
Rapid assessment
ATLS
Resuscitation and stabilization
Definitive management/Transfer
ATLS Overview
The ATLS Concept
Primary Survey
Adjuncts
Secondary Survey
Definitive Care/Transfer
ATLS Overview
The ATLS Concept
treat life threatening injuries as they are
identified
assessment/diagnosis and resuscitation are
simultaneous
ATLS Overview
Primary Survey
A Airway
B Breathing
C Circulation
D (neurologic) Disability
E Exposure / Environment
AMPLE
ATLS Overview
Adjuncts
Urinary catheter
NG tube
Xrays
ATLS Overview
Secondary Survey
Thorough head to toe assessment
Definitive Care/Transfer
Deadly Dozen
Lethal Six Hidden Six
airway obstruction pulmonary contusion
tension PTX diaphragmatic tear/rupture
open PTX tracheobronchial injury
flail chest blunt cardiac injury
massive hemothorax thoracic aortic disrupt
cardiac tamponade esophageal injury
ATLS Specifics
A - airway (with C-spine protection)
Preventable Deaths from Airway Problems
failure to recognize need for airway
inability to establish airway
failure to recognize incorrect placement
displacement of previously placed airway
failure to recognize need for ventilation
aspiration of gastric contents
Airway Algorithm
ATLS Specifics
A - airway (with C-spine protection)
Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI)
preoxygenation
cricoid pressure
sedation (etomidate, midazolam)
succhinylcholine
orotracheal intubation
cuff inflation, confirmation of position
release of cricoid pressure
ATLS Specifics
Alternative Airway Devices/Options
nasotracheal intubation
LMA / intubating LMA
Glide scope
fiberoptic intubation
surgical airway
needle
percutaneous
open
ATLS Specifics
Alternative Airway Devices/Options
ATLS Specifics
Surgical Airway
ATLS Specifics
A - airway (with C-spine protection)
ATLS:
lateral C spine film
complete C spine series during secondary survey
Current practice:
in ER assume C spine injury
no C spine films in ER
CT scan of C spine with reconstructions
ATLS Specifics
A - airway (with C-spine protection)
Clearing the C spine (multiple trauma patient)
rarely done in ER (except fully conscious, no distracting
injury)
CT scan with reconstructions
Further studies
MRI
Flexion - Extension views
ATLS Specifics
B breathing
oxygenation
ventilation
monitoring
clinical (auscultation)
O2 saturation
EtCO2
ABGs
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
recognition and resuscitation from shock
post traumatic shock is hemorrhagic shock
until proven otherwise
Shock
Obstructive Nonobstructive
Tension Cardiac
Distributive Nondistributive
pneumo tamponade
Sepsis/SIRS Hypovolemic
Anaphylaxis Hemorrhagic
Neurogenic Third spacing
Cardiogenic
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
Classification and mechanisms of shock
obstructive
tension pneumothorax
cardiac tamponade
Tension pneumothorax is the most EASILY corrected cause of
shock
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
Classification and mechanisms of shock
distributive
spinal cord injury
sepsis
anaphylaxis
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
Classification and mechanisms of shock
cardiogenic
myocardial contusion
valvular disruption
ischemic injury
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
Classification and mechanisms of shock
hypovolemic
blood loss
fluid loss
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
ACS Classes of Hemorrhage
classes I - IV
based on estimated blood loss and effect on vital
signs
ATLS Specifics
C circulation (shock management)
STOP the BLEEDING
External blood loss
Internal blood loss
REPLACE blood loss
ATLS Specifics
C circulation (shock management)
Vascular access
Direct pressure
Fluid administration
Assessment of response
ATLS Specifics
C circulation (shock management)
Fluid Administration
ATLS: initial 2 litre bolus of warmed Ringers
(NS)
ATLS Specifics
C circulation (shock management)
Crystalloid
Isotonic
Hypertonic
Colloid
Albumin
Starch (Pentaspan, Voluven)
ATLS Specifics
Fluid Administration - which fluid?
Crystalloid
massive fluid administration
diffuse edema (?worsens cerebral edema)
?contributes to compartment syndrome
Colloid
no demonstrated benefit (?harm, SAFE trial)
costlier
Hypertonic saline (3%, 7.5% =/- dextran)
no demonstrated benefit (trial in progress)
hypernatremia
ATLS Specifics
C circulation (shock management)
Blood replacement
type O
type specific
fully crossmatched
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
Role of Factor VIIa
initially used for hemophilia
initiates thrombin formation by binding with exposed
tissue factor
reverses coagulopathy
use after
surgically accessible
bleeding controlled
coag factors and platelets
ATLS Specifics
C - circulation (shock management)
Role of Factor VIIa
parallel RCTs in blunt/pen trauma (JTrauma 05)
decreased RBC use in blunt trauma
better outcome in coagulopathic patients (CCM
06)
better outcome in TBI (NEJM 05)
multiple case reports/series showing benefit in
reversal of coagulopathy and lower transfusion
ATLS Specifics
C circulation (shock management)
Stop Internal Bleeding
chest, abdomen, pelvis
ATLS Specifics
Recognition of thoracic hemorrhage
clinical
CXR
Chest tube(s)
ATLS Specifics
Recognition of abdominal hemorrhage
clinical
FAST
DPL
laparotomy
ATLS Specifics
Recognition of pelvic hemorrhage
clinical
pelvic x-ray
CT scan
Damage Control Laparotomy
Part 1
stop all overt arterial bleeding
pack other bleeding
control contamination
modified closure
Damage Control Laparotomy
Part 2
return to ICU for warming, correction of
coagulation and acidosis
Part 3
return to OR for definitive closure
ATLS Specifics
D (neurologic) Disability
ATLS: rapid recognition of lateralizing injury
(potentially surgically correctable)
confirmation by CT scan
emergency craniotomy for drainage
ATLS Specifics
E - exposure / environment
remove clothing
keep covered between examinations
(hypothermia)
logroll
full examination of extremities
Thanks
Q questions?