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Tagged: Fluid, guidelines, resuscitation, Trauma
This topic contains 0 replies, has 1 voice, and was last updated by mozbclb 2 months, 1 week ago.
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January 28, 2019 at 8:55 pm #306387
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The guidelines are intended to provide a general guide to the management of specified . What are the endpoints of fluid resuscitation in the trauma patient?
28 Jan 2004 NICE has made the following recommendations about giving IV fluid replacement to injured people before they reach hospital. The guidance
Fluids (in the form of small boluses, i.e., 250 mL) should be given to return the patient to a coherent mental status or palpable radial pulse. In the setting of traumatic brain injury, however, fluids should be titrated to maintain systolic blood pressure greater than 90 mm Hg (or mean pressure greater than 60 mm Hg).
In the initial stages of trauma resuscitation the precise fluid, crystalloid or colloid, used is probably not . Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) guidelines 2004.The Advanced Trauma Life Support and Japan Advanced Trauma Evaluation and Care guidelines both recommend an initial rapid infusion of fluid (1?2 L) as a
Controversy: whether or not aggressive fluid resuscitation is beneficial in the setting of hypotensive trauma. Hypovolemic trauma patients do reliably respond to
11 Sep 2012 Based on the evidence available, we suggest that fluid resuscitation before haemorrhage control should aim to maintain a systolic blood pressure of 80 mm Hg or a palpable radial pulse or cerebration by using small volume boluses of 250 mL. This value is arbitrary with little evidence to support it.
Almost all circulatory shock states require large-volume IV fluid replacement, as does severe intravascular volume depletion (eg, due to diarrhea or heatstroke).
5 Jan 2017 Initial resuscitation should be with 20 ml/kg of balanced crystalloid [90]. The volume of clear fluid should not exceed 40 ml/kg [90]. Administration of blood and blood products (platelets and plasma) should be considered depending on the response to the initial 20 ml/kg crystalloid bolus and the severity of injury. -
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