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Journal ArticleDOI

Relationships Between Markers of Inflammation, Severity of Injury, and Clinical Outcomes in Hemorrhagic Shock

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TLDR
The investigators concluded that although the levels of markers of inflammation increased in THS patients, they were inadequate for predicting mortality and the development of complications such as acute respiratory distress syndrome, multiple organ failure, and sepsis.
Abstract
This study was performed to investigate the relationships between markers of inflammation in serum (interleukin-6 [IL-6], interleukin-10 [IL-10], and granulocyte elastase [GE]), severity of injury, and clinical outcomes, and to evaluate the predictive value of these markers for major complications and mortality. This study, which was conducted between August 2003 and May 2005, examined patients older than 16 y who were admitted to the Emergency Unit of the Uludag University Medical School within 12 h after trauma, and who had traumatic hemorrhagic shock (THS) at admission. Three groups were established: the THS group (n=20), the pure hemorrhagic shock (PHS) group (n=20), and the healthy control group (n=20). Demographic data were recorded for all subjects, and blood samples were taken for lactate, base excess, GE, IL-6, and IL-10 measurements. The Glasgow Coma Score, the Revised Trauma Score, the Injury Severity Score, the New Injury Severity Score, and the Trauma Score-Injury Severity Score were calculated; complications and final clinical outcomes were monitored. A total of 35 men and 25 women were included in the study; mean patient age was 41+/-17 y. In the THS group, scores were as follows: Revised Trauma Score, 10.2+/-2.2; Trauma Score-Injury Severity Score, 0.86+/-0.2; Injury Severity Score, 24.8+/-9.0; and New Injury Severity Score, 32.7+/-9.0. IL-6, IL-10, lactate, and base excess levels in the THS group were significantly higher than those in the PHS and healthy control groups. The serum GE level of the THS group was significantly higher than that of the healthy control group, but it did not differ significantly from that of the PHS group. Complications such as sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and multiple organ failure occurred in 50% of the THS group and in 20% of the PHS group. Mortality was 30% in the THS group and 10% in the PHS group. In the THS group, no significant differences were noted between markers of inflammation and trauma scores of patients who died and those who survived. The investigators concluded that although the levels of markers of inflammation increased in THS patients, they were inadequate for predicting mortality and the development of complications such as acute respiratory distress syndrome, multiple organ failure, and sepsis. A larger study based on the use of serial marker measurements is warranted.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Etiology and Therapeutic Approach to Elevated Lactate Levels

TL;DR: An overview of the pathogenesis of lactate level elevation is provided followed by an in-depth look at the varied etiologies, including medication-related causes, as well as some general recommendations on the management of patients with elevated lactate levels.
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Using IL-6 concentrations in the first 24 h following trauma to predict immunological complications and mortality in trauma patients: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: It is shown that serum concentration of IL-6 within the first 24 h after trauma could be useful for the prediction of post-traumatic complications, particularly MOF/MODS and mortality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Very early posttraumatic serum alterations are significantly associated to initial massive RBC substitution, injury severity, multiple organ failure and adverse clinical outcome in multiple injured patients

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that interleukin levels can clearly differentiate the presence of hemorrhagic shock and subsequent massive blood product substitution, the development of multiple organ failure and clinical outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lactate as a diagnostic marker in transient loss of consciousness

TL;DR: Serum lactate levels in the acute diagnosis were an excellent biomarker for the discrimination of generalized seizures from psychogenic non-epileptic and syncopal events, corroborating its importance for the standard work-up of acute disturbances of consciousness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prehospital Hypotension Is Associated With Altered Inflammation Dynamics and Worse Outcomes Following Blunt Trauma in Humans.

TL;DR: Studies in stringently matched patient cohorts suggest that an episode of prehospital hypotension post trauma leads to early, dynamic reprogramming of systemic inflammation (including differential upstream regulation of interleukin-6), which is associated with worse outcomes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating trauma care: the triss method. trauma score and the injury severity score

TL;DR: The TRISS method as mentioned in this paper is a standard approach for evaluating outcome of trauma care, which uses Anatomic, physiologic, and age characteristics to quantify probability of survival as related to severity of injury.
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A revision of the Trauma Score.

TL;DR: T-RTS, the sum of coded values of GCS, SBP, and RR, demonstrated increased sensitivity and some loss in specificity when compared with a triage criterion based on TS and GCS values, and RTS demonstrated substantially improved reliability in outcome predictions compared to the TS.
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Multiple-organ failure. Generalized autodestructive inflammation?

TL;DR: It is concluded that sepsis is probably not the essential cause of MOF, and an alternative hypothesis is presented involving massive activation of inflammatory mediators by severe tissue trauma or intra-abdominal sepsi, resulting in systemic damage to vascular endothelia, permeability edema, and impaired oxygen availability to the mitochondria despite adequate arterial oxygen transport.
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Cytokine patterns in patients after major vascular surgery, hemorrhagic shock, and severe blunt trauma. Relation with subsequent adult respiratory distress syndrome and multiple organ failure.

TL;DR: Data support the concept that these syndromes are caused by an overwhelming autodestructive inflammatory response, and higher concentrations of these cytokines are associated with an increased mortality rate and an increased risk for subsequent ARDS and MOF.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shedding of tumor necrosis factor receptors by activated human neutrophils.

TL;DR: TNF-R shed by PMN may be one source of the TNF-binding proteins found in body fluids, and may blunt the actions of the cytokine on other cells.
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