2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.injury.2010.11.062
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Haemorrhage control in pelvic fractures—A survey of surgical capabilities

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Cited by 20 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…4) seems to decrease mortality, at least according to the teams that advise this technique [23][24][25][26]. Pelvic packing is still not widely used (less than 15% of British surgeons know how to perform a retroperitoneal pelvic packing [27]) but a recent publication [28] has shown that the teaching of damage control techniques (including retroperitoneal packing) to rural Norwegian centers is efficient and is capable of saving lives. In France, the current indications for pelvic packing include the two following situations: • appearance or rapid aggravation of pelvic retroperitoneal hemorrhage (RPH) during a laparotomy performed for bleeding visceral trauma, the development of which is related to improved hemodynamics because of the hemostasis thus far performed; • bleeding open pelvic injuries.…”
Section: Principles Of Management Hemostatic Strategymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4) seems to decrease mortality, at least according to the teams that advise this technique [23][24][25][26]. Pelvic packing is still not widely used (less than 15% of British surgeons know how to perform a retroperitoneal pelvic packing [27]) but a recent publication [28] has shown that the teaching of damage control techniques (including retroperitoneal packing) to rural Norwegian centers is efficient and is capable of saving lives. In France, the current indications for pelvic packing include the two following situations: • appearance or rapid aggravation of pelvic retroperitoneal hemorrhage (RPH) during a laparotomy performed for bleeding visceral trauma, the development of which is related to improved hemodynamics because of the hemostasis thus far performed; • bleeding open pelvic injuries.…”
Section: Principles Of Management Hemostatic Strategymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Meanwhile, interventional radiologists are not in-house at all times [3], and interventions are easily to be delayed during nights and weekends [39]. Metcalfe et al reported that a 24 h formal interventional radiology service was only available at 18% of hospitals in Wales, UK [40]. PP is a fast and easy procedure with a low demand for equipment and short learning curve, deserving a more widespread use.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The labor costs per procedure performed by the on-call interventionist were € 459.92. , the "real world scenario" will differ significantly from the above-mentioned recommendation: the authors found a formal OOHR for IR to be installed in 28 % of evaluated hospitals in the London area with 58 % offering an "ad hoc" service for cer- tain but not all interventional procedures. IR coverage for the treatment of bleeding complications from pelvic fractures has been described by other specialities as patchy and often unavailable [15]. To our knowledge, a formal and 24/7 OOHR for IR may exist at certain university hospitals in Germany, but seems to be rare amongst the majority of all German hospitals even with major trauma centers only offering an "ad hoc" service for IR procedures as reported earlier by a Scottish working group [3].…”
mentioning
confidence: 84%