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Hypotensive resuscitation FROm animal study to clinical practice Dr YW Wong United Christian Hospital

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 resuscitation FROm animal study to clinical practice Dr YW Wong United Christian Hospital

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  1. Hypotensive resuscitationFROm animal study to clinical practiceDr YW WongUnited Christian Hospital

  2. Outline • History of fluid resuscitation • Clinical trial • Animal studies • Human studies • Guideline • Controversies • Conclusion

  3. 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

  4. 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

  5. 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

  6. Wiggers’ model may not be accurate • Blood pressure is controlled by investigatorby controlling the blood loss through the iv catheter

  7. Aggressive fluid resuscitation • Early aggressive fluid resuscitation was used routinely in Vietnam War in 1970s • Coincidentally, ARDS was commonly described

  8. 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

  9. Hypotensive Resuscitation

  10. 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.

  11. 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’

  12. 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

  13. 2003 • Hypotensive resuscitation improved mortality compared to traditional resuscitation

  14. How about Human Studies?

  15. 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

  16. Delayed resuscitation: • Less fluid and packed cell given • Delayed resuscitation: pre op • Lower SBP • Better Hb, plt, clotting profile

  17. Delayed resuscitation: • Improved survival • (62% vs 70%) • Shorter length of stay • Delayed resuscitation: • Trend of less ARDS

  18. 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

  19. SBP 114 +-12 VS SBP 100 +- 17 • Similar survival: 92.7%

  20. 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.

  21. That was 10 years ago Few more studies published recently

  22. 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)

  23. 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%)

  24. Ongoing study

  25. 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

  26. Survival • MAP 50mmHg had • better 24hr survival • reduced transfuion requirement • Less coagulopathy

  27. So Which way is correct • Consequences of aggressive fluid resuscitation and bursting the clot • Consequences of hypotension and decreased organ prefusion

  28. Different Parties have different practice

  29. ATLS • Everyone gets 2 liters of crystalloidinitially • Responders • Transient responders •  rebolus or blood for ongoing bleeding • Non-responders • blood for serious ongoing bleeding

  30. 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

  31. US Army • Stop bleeding • 500ml fluid if • No radial pulse or • Decrease mental status • If positive response, stop fluids

  32. Something is still missing

  33. 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?

  34. Unsolved problems • Application in concomitant head injury patient? • Need to maintain CPP

  35. 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

  36. 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

  37. 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

  38. 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

  39. Thank You

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