Clinical Management and Challenges in Polytrauma

Bibliographic Details
Title: Clinical Management and Challenges in Polytrauma
Contributors: Pfeifer, Roman
Publisher Information: Basel: 2022.
Publication Year: 2022
Original Material: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Subject Terms: pelvic ring fracture, PCCD, position, associated injuries, geriatric trauma, scoring, polytrauma, ISS, AIS, geriatric patients, orthogeriatric, E-bike injuries, outcome, injury pattern comparison, traumatic injury, reactive oxygen species, phagocytosis, CD14, CD16, CD62L, fMLP, PMA, emergency surgery, trauma team competence, trauma system, life-saving intervention, trauma, non-invasive external pelvic stabilizers, bleeding, pelvic fractures, post mortem analysis, biomechanical force, pneumatic pelvic sling VBM®, T-POD®, cloth sling, SAM Sling®, trauma victims, prehospital death, Injury Severity Score (ISS), hemorrhage, shock, resuscitation, coagulopathy, oxygen transport, endotheliopathy, microcirculation, macrocirculation, orthopaedic trauma, nutritional deficiencies, vitamins, lower extremity, wound complications, nutrition wound healing, platelets, immune system, posttraumatic organ failure, posttraumatic lung dysfunction, posttraumatic hyperinflammation, I-FABP, biomarker, intestinal damage, hemorrhagic shock, major trauma, Medicine and Nursing
More Details: Trauma is still a leading cause of death in patients below 40 years of age. Clinical management of severely injured patients is challenging in all phases of treatment during the clinical course. Numerous factors, such as injury severity, injury pattern, patient characteristics and trauma system, affect the decision-making process in our patients. After the successful initial management of an unstable multiply injured patient, secondary definitive surgeries and reconstructions may have a risk for further systemic complications and the deterioration of the patient’s physiology. A “Safe Definitive Surgery” (SDS) concept considers the dynamics of the clinical course (prehospital, operations, complications, etc.) and the patient’s physiology. Due to the repeated re-evaluation and assessment of the patient’s clinical course, dynamics and adaptation of the treatment strategy, the safe management of polytraumatized patients is possible. Many unanswered questions still exist and need to be addressed in future studies: Which patients profit by the damage control strategy and which do not? When is it best to start with the definitive fixation of fractures in multiply injured patients? How can one improve the quality of life in polytraumatized patients? What are the strategies in elderly severely injured patients? With this Special Issue, we would like to stimulate research in the field of polytrauma in order to shed light on the above-mentioned questions
Document Type: eBook
File Description: application/octet-stream
Language: English
ISBN: 978-3-0365-5139-5
978-3-0365-5140-1
DOI: 10.3390/books978-3-0365-5140-1
Access URL: https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/92132
https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/6009
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
open access
URL: http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Notes: ONIX_20220916_9783036551395_118
Accession Number: edsdob.20.500.12854.92132
Database: Directory of Open Access Books
More Details
ISBN:9783036551395
9783036551401
DOI:10.3390/books978-3-0365-5140-1
Language:English