Abstract

Objective Identification of the prehospital factors associated with a poor prognosis of immediate traumatic arrest should help reduce unwarranted treatment. We aim to reveal the clinical factors related to death after traumatic arrest on the scene. Methods We performed a multicenter (4 tertiary hospitals in urban areas of South Korea) retrospective study on consecutive adult patients with trauma arrest on scene who were transferred by fire ambulance from January 2016 to December 2018. Patients with death on arrival in the emergency room (ER) were excluded. Prehospital data were collected from first aid records, and information on each patient's survival outcome in the ER was collected from an electronic database. Patients were divided into ER death and ER survival groups, and variables associated with prehospital trauma were compared. Results A total of 145 (84.3%) and 27 (15.7%) patients were enrolled in the ER death and survival groups, respectively. Logistic regression analysis revealed that asystole (OR 4.033, 95% CI 1.342–12.115, p = 0.013) was related to ER death and that ROSC in the prehospital phase (OR 0.100, 95% CI 0.012–0.839, p = 0.034) was inversely related to ER death. In subgroup analysis of those who suffered fall injuries, greater height of fall was associated with ER death (15.0 (5.5–25.0) vs. 4.0 (2.0–7.5) meters, p = 0.001); the optimal height cutoff for prediction of ER death was 10 meters, with 66.1% sensitivity and 100% specificity. Conclusions In cases of traumatic arrest, asystole, no prehospital ROSC, and falls from a greater height were associated with trauma death in the ER. Termination of resuscitation in traumatic arrest cases should be done on the basis of comprehensive clinical factors.

Highlights

  • Traumatic arrest immediately after injury is still usually irreversible and leads immediately to death despite the development of comprehensive modern trauma systems [1]

  • Immediate deaths account for about 60% of all traumarelated deaths. e overall survival rate from traumatic arrest on the prehospital phase is as low as 3.7%, and previous studies reported very poor outcomes even following cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) [2]. erefore, establishment of termination of resuscitation (TOR) rules for cases of immediate traumatic arrest may avoid unnecessary consumption of valuable resources and unwarranted treatment. e 2012 National Association of Emergency Medical Service (EMS) Physicians and American College of Surgeons’ Committee on Trauma (NAEMSP-ASCOT) published a joint position article concerning TOR rules for patients in traumatic cardiac arrest [3]

  • We aim to reveal the clinical factors related to death after traumatic arrest on the scene and validate the objective protocol of early TOR rules for traumatic arrest patients according to a variety of situations

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Summary

Introduction

Traumatic arrest immediately after injury is still usually irreversible and leads immediately to death despite the development of comprehensive modern trauma systems [1]. E 2012 National Association of Emergency Medical Service (EMS) Physicians and American College of Surgeons’ Committee on Trauma (NAEMSP-ASCOT) published a joint position article concerning TOR rules for patients in traumatic cardiac arrest [3]. Erefore, establishment of termination of resuscitation (TOR) rules for cases of immediate traumatic arrest may avoid unnecessary consumption of valuable resources and unwarranted treatment. These TOR rules cannot be applied uniformly across different countries because they consider the characteristics of traumatic arrest and the traumatic care system in the prehospital phase. We aim to reveal the clinical factors related to death after traumatic arrest on the scene and validate the objective protocol of early TOR rules for traumatic arrest patients according to a variety of situations

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