The evolution of a purpose designed hybrid trauma operating room from the trauma service perspective: The RAPTOR (resuscitation with angiography percutaneous treatments and operative resuscitations) |
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Authors: | Andrew W. Kirkpatrick,Christine Vis,Mirette Dubé ,Susan Biesbroek,Chad G. Ball,Jason Laberge,Jonas Shultz,Ken Rea,David Sadler,John B. Holcomb,John Kortbeek |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Surgery, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;2. Department of Radiology, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;3. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;4. Department of Regional Trauma Services, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;5. Department of Foothills Medical Centre and the University of Calgary Calgary, Alberta, Canada;6. Alberta Health Services, Alberta, Canada;g Dialog Corporation, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;h The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, USA |
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Abstract: | Traumatic injury is the leading cause of potentially preventable lost years of life in the Western world and exsanguination is the most potentially preventable cause of post-traumatic death. With mature trauma systems and experienced trauma centres, extra-abdominal sites, such as the pelvis, constitute the most frequent anatomic site of exsanguination. Haemorrhage control for such bleeding often requires surgical adjuncts most notably interventional radiology (IR). With the usual paradigm of surgery conducted within an operating room and IR procedures within distant angiography suites, responsible clinicians are faced with making difficult decisions regarding where to transport the most physiologically unstable patients for haemorrhage control. If such a critical patient is transported to the wrong suite, they may die unnecessarily despite having potentially salvageable injuries. Thus, it seems only logical that the resuscitative operating room of the future would have IR capabilities making it the obvious geographic destination for critically unstable patients, especially those who are exsanguinating. |
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Keywords: | Injury Exsanguination Critical care Interventional angiography Percutaneous techniques Trauma resuscitation Human factors |
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