Cheng-Cheng Tung
Yuan Rung Hospital, Taiwan
Keynote: J Trauma Treat
Background & Purpose: Pelvic fracture bleeding generally destines hemorrhagic shock. Trans-arterial-embolization (TAE) is regarded as the most useful treatment. However, there are still some initial presentations of the patient impacting the effectiveness of TAE in pelvic fracture bleeding. This retrospective study is to explore profitability of available initial presentations for TAE in pelvic fracture bleeding. Method: There were 27 charts reviewed retrospectively. The definition of TAE failure was that the patient eventually received an exigent laparotomy due to uncontrolled bleeding after TAE or that the patient was defunct. We analyzed available initial presentations like age, gender, systolic-blood-pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, body temperature, Glasgow-coma-scale (GCS), injury-severity-score (ISS) and associated-injuries through Pearsonâ��s correlation and independent t-test when the patient received therapeutic TAE. Odds-ratio preceded the cut-off point disclosed through an independent t-test for successful TAE and used to assess the congruity. Result: Successful TAE didnâ��t associate with age and gender. Hierarchical statistically significant associations between successful TAE and initial presentations were the patientâ��s body temperature, associated injury, respiratory rate, systolic-blood-pressure, GCS and ISS. Odds-ratios for all statistically significant initial presentations were within a 95% confidence interval. Conclusion: Profitability of available initial presentations for TAE is hypothermia prevention with upholding a body temperature of more than 36 �°C, determining associated injuries within two organ-systems, keeping the respiratory rate around 22 per minute, sustaining systolic-blood-pressure around 90 mmHg, maintaining a heart-rate of around 100 per-minute as well as the permissiveness of a minor head injury with the GCS more than 13 and a moderate ISS of less than 20.
Cheng-Cheng Tung is currently working as a General Surgeon in Yuan Rung Hospital, Taiwan. He has completed his medical degree in Taipei Medical University, School of Medicine. Earlier, he had worked as Trauma and General Surgeon at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital. Further, he did his Fellowship at University of Maryland Medical Center and R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center. He has done his PhD in Asia University College of Medical and Health Science. His research interest is general surgery, endoscopic surgery and acute care surgery.
Journal of Trauma & Treatment received 1048 citations as per Google Scholar report