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Hypotensive resuscitation FROm animal study to clinical practice Dr YW Wong United Christian Hospital. Outline. History of fluid resuscitation Clinical trial Animal studies Human studies Guideline Controversies Conclusion. Trauma.
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Hypotensive resuscitationFROm animal study to clinical practiceDr YW WongUnited Christian Hospital
Outline • History of fluid resuscitation • Clinical trial • Animal studies • Human studies • Guideline • Controversies • Conclusion
Trauma • Trauma had long been a major cause of preventable deaths worldwide. • One-third of trauma deaths because the victims bleed to death within the first several hours
Lethal triad • In the past, high volume resuscitation strategies was used to reverse haemorrhagic shock • However, still a number of patient develop lethal triad and leads to mortality • Acidosis, hypothermia, coagulopathy • Can be due to the injury, or due to resuscitation
History of Fluid resuscitation • Controlled hemorrhage animal models in 1950s. • Wiggers insert a IV catheter, allow the animal to bleed and maintain a predetermined level of hypotension • Fluid deficit was corrected with crystalloid 3 times the blood loss • Lead to traditional fluid replacement regimen of 3:1 crystalloid: blood
Wiggers’ model may not be accurate • Blood pressure is controlled by investigatorby controlling the blood loss through the iv catheter
Aggressive fluid resuscitation • Early aggressive fluid resuscitation was used routinely in Vietnam War in 1970s • Coincidentally, ARDS was commonly described
1980s • Uncontrolled haemorrhagic models were developed to simulate blunt trauma • maximal vasoconstriction • thrombus formation • Animal study : Aggressive resuscitation with isotonic crystalloid • Increase blood pressure and increase blood loss • Did not reduce mortality
Hypotensive Resuscitation • In haemorrhagic shock patient, hypotension and vasoconstriction help to stalilized the clot • Increasing the blood pressure places additional stress on formed clot • Blood pressure greater than 90mmHg associated with higher risk of re-bleeding • Hypotensive resuscitation aim at keeping the blood pressure low enough while maintaining perfusion of end organ.
Hypotensive Resuscitation • Walter Cannon proposed it in 1918 • “If the pressure is raised before the surgeon is ready to check any bleeding that may take place, blood that is sorely needed may be lost” • The preventive treatment of wound shock • JAMA 70:618-621 George Higginson Professor of Physiology Who invented the word ‘homeostasis’
MAP 40 MAP 80 MAP 0 By Aortotomy MAP 40mmHg group had better survival than MAP 80mmHg group Map 40mmHg group also had less blood loss
2003 • Hypotensive resuscitation improved mortality compared to traditional resuscitation
Prospective controlled trial • Single centre • Penetrating torso injury with SBP < 90mmHg • Exclude: pregnant, age <16, revised trauma score 0, fatal gunshot to head, not requiring operation • Immediate Resuscitation (309) • traditional resuscitation with crystalloid • Delayed Resuscitation (289) • Withhold IV Fluid until arrival to operative theatre VS
Delayed resuscitation: • Less fluid and packed cell given • Delayed resuscitation: pre op • Lower SBP • Better Hb, plt, clotting profile
Delayed resuscitation: • Improved survival • (62% vs 70%) • Shorter length of stay • Delayed resuscitation: • Trend of less ARDS
Randomized controlled trial • Single centre • Trauma patient with SBP <90mmHg • Exclude: pregnant, CNS injury/ impaired consciousness, age >55, history of DM/ IHD • Target SBP > 100mmHg (55) VS Target SBP 70mmHg (55) • Titrating Crystalloid or blood product • Fluid restriction to lower BP • Until active bleeding was stopped
SBP 114 +-12 VS SBP 100 +- 17 • Similar survival: 92.7%
Cochrane Review • Timing and volume of fluid administration for patients with bleeding (2003) • We found no evidence from randomized controlled trials for or against early or larger volume of intravenous fluid administration in uncontrolled haemorrhage. • While increasing fluids will maintain blood pressure, it may also worsen bleeding by diluting clotting factors.
That was 10 years ago Few more studies published recently
Retrospective cohort study • Single centre • Including patient with emergent damage control laparotomy • Exclude: age <18, pregnant, die on scene or during OT VS Normotenive group (282) Hypotensive group (108)
Hypotensive group: • Better: • temp, heart rate, plt, INR, fibrinogen, pH, base value, lactate • Fluid: • Less fluid given (13.9L vs 5L) • Less RBC, plasma, platelet transfusion • Survival: • 24hr survival ( 97% vs 88%) • 30day survival ( 86% vs 76%)
Ongoing RCT • Single centre • Trauma patients with SBP <90mmHg need laparotomy or thoracotomy • Exclude: age >45, <14, pregnant, history of IHD/CVA, head injury • Minimum blood pressure to trigger further resuscitation • If spontaneously MAP higher than target, no further action Target Intra-op MAP 50mmHg Target Intra-op MAP 65mmHg VS
Survival • MAP 50mmHg had • better 24hr survival • reduced transfuion requirement • Less coagulopathy
So Which way is correct • Consequences of aggressive fluid resuscitation and bursting the clot • Consequences of hypotension and decreased organ prefusion
ATLS • Everyone gets 2 liters of crystalloidinitially • Responders • Transient responders • rebolus or blood for ongoing bleeding • Non-responders • blood for serious ongoing bleeding
NICE guideline • Recommendation on trauma • Adults and older children • IV fluid should not be administered if radial pulse is present • 250ml IV fluid should be given if pulse cannot be felt • Burns, Blast injuries, Head injuries exceptionto permissive hypotension
US Army • Stop bleeding • 500ml fluid if • No radial pulse or • Decrease mental status • If positive response, stop fluids
Unsolved problems • Concept of hypotensive resuscitation is clear • But the definition is not! • Different studies use different definition • SBP? MAP? Limit crystaloid? Complete withhold or titrate against target BP?
Unsolved problems • Application in concomitant head injury patient? • Need to maintain CPP
Unsolved problems • Application in concomitant head injury patient? • Lack of human study on this area • Animal study: Stern 2000 • Swine model on uncontrolled haemorrhage and brain injury • MAP 60 vs 80 • Survival: MAP 60 better and MAP 80 • Similar ICP and cerebral blood flow • Draw back: no long term neurological outcome
Unsolved problems • Duration of hypotensive resuscitation before irreversible damage • Lack of consensus • In Dutton’s studies • Mean duration is 2.57 hour • Similar survival between 2 group
Difficult area for research • Heterogeneous definition of hypotensive resuscitation • Heterogeneous group of trauma patients • US: both penetrating and blunt trauma • UK: most blunt trauma and head injury • Ethical issue, difficult to recruit trauma patient • Limited paper focus on this topic
Conclusion • Aggressive fluid resuscitation in trauma case may not be totally beneficial • Multiple animal studies demonstrate benefits of hypotensive resuscitation • Equivocal result from human studies. Yet more recent studies demonstrate beneficial effect of hypotensive resuscitation • Different parties had different practice worldwide • Ongoing RCT may help to provide more evidence in near future