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Intra-abdominal packing with laparotomy pads and QuikClot™ during damage control laparotomy: A safety analysis
Affiliation:1. Department of Surgery, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, United States;2. Division of Trauma, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, United States;3. Cooper Research Institute, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ, United States;4. Division of Trauma, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States;1. Academic Department of Military Surgery and Trauma, Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, United Kingdom;2. Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, United Kingdom;3. University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom;1. Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, SE-701 85 Örebro, Sweden;2. Department of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University, Örebro, Sweden
Abstract:BackgroundIntra-abdominal packing with laparotomy pads (LP) is a common and rapid method for hemorrhage control in critically injured patients. Combat Gauze™ and Trauma Pads™ (QC] Z-Medica QuikClot®) are kaolin impregnated hemostatic agents, that in addition to LP, may improve hemorrhage control. While QC packing has been effective in a swine liver injury model, QC remains unstudied for human intra-abdominal use. We hypothesized QC packing during damage control laparotomy (DCL) better controls hemorrhage than standard packing and is safe for intracorporeal use.MethodsA retrospective review (2011–2014) at a Level-I Trauma Center reviewed all patients who underwent DCL with intentionally retained packing. Clinical characteristics, intraoperative and postoperative parameters, and outcomes were compared with respect to packing (LP vs. LP + QC). All complications occurring within the patients’ hospital stays were reviewed. A p  0.05 was considered significant.Results68 patients underwent DCL with packing; (LP n = 40; LP + QC n = 28). No difference in age, BMI, injury mechanism, ISS, or GCS was detected (Table 1, all p > 0.05). LP + QC patients had a lower systolic blood pressure upon ED presentation and greater blood loss during index laparotomy than LP patients. LP + QC patients received more packed red blood cell and fresh frozen plasma resuscitation during index laparotomy (both p < 0.05). Despite greater physiologic derangement in the LP + QC group, there was no difference in total blood products required after index laparotomy until abdominal closure (LP vs LP + QC; p > 0.05). After a median of 2 days until abdominal closure in both groups, no difference in complications rates attributable to intra-abdominal packing (LP vs LP + QC) was detected.ConclusionWhile the addition of QC to LP packing did not confer additional benefit to standard packing, there was no additional morbidity identified with its use. The surgeons at our institution now select augmented packing with QC for sicker patients, as we believe this may have additional advantage over standard LP packing. A randomized controlled trial is warranted to further evaluate the intra-abdominal use of advanced hemostatic agents, like QC, for both hemostasis and associated morbidity.
Keywords:Intra-abdominal packing  Combat gauze™  Trauma pad™  QuikClot  Kaolin  Damage control laparotomy  Intra-abdominal hemorrhage  Hemorrhage control  Hemostatic agent  Hemostasis
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