Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study
RESEARCH|Updated:2022-12-27
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Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study
Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study
解放军医学杂志(英文版)2019年6卷第1期 页码:23-30
Affiliations:
1. US Air Force En route Care Research Center 59th MDW/ST, Chief Scientist's Office –US Army Institute of Surgical research, JBSA Ft.Houston,Sam
2. Department of Emergency Medicine, San Antonio Military Medical Center,JBSA Ft.Houston,Sam
4. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine
Author bio:
Funds:
Department of Defense Joint Program Committee(JPC-6)
DOI:
中图分类号:R823
纸质出版:2019
Accepted:
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Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study[J]. 解放军医学杂志(英文版), 2019,6(1):23-30.
[1]Joseph K.Maddry,Crystal A.Perez,Alejandra G.Mora,Jill D.Lear,Shelia C.Savell,Vikhyat S.Bebarta.Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study[J].Military Medical Research,2019,6(01):23-30.
Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study[J]. 解放军医学杂志(英文版), 2019,6(1):23-30.DOI:
[1]Joseph K.Maddry,Crystal A.Perez,Alejandra G.Mora,Jill D.Lear,Shelia C.Savell,Vikhyat S.Bebarta.Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study[J].Military Medical Research,2019,6(01):23-30.DOI:
Impact of prehospital medical evacuation (MEDEVAC) transport time on combat mortality in patients with noncompressible torso injury and traumatic amputations: a retrospective study
摘要
Abstract
Background: In combat operations
patients with traumatic injuries require expeditious evacuation to improve survival. Studies have shown that long transport times are associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Limited data exist on the influence of transport time on patient outcomes with specific injury types. The objective of this study was to determine the impact of the duration of time from the initial request for medical evacuation to arrival at a medical treatment facility on morbidity and mortality in casualties with traumatic extremity amputation and noncompressible torso injury(NCTI).Methods: We completed a retrospective review of MEDEVAC patient care records for United States military personnel who sustained traumatic amputations and NCTI during Operation Enduring Freedom between January 2011 and March 2014. We grouped patients as traumatic amputation and NCTI(AMP+NCTI)
traumatic amputation only(AMP)
and neither AMP nor NCTI(Non-AMP/NCTI). Analysis was performed using chi-squared tests
Fisher’s exact tests
Cochran-Armitage Trend tests
Shapiro-Wilks tests
Wilcoxon and Kruskal-Wallis techniques and Cox proportional hazards regression modeling.Results: We reviewed 1267 records
of which 669 had an injury severity score(ISS) of 10 or greater and were included in the analysis. In the study population
15.5% sustained only amputation injuries(n=104
AMP only)
10.8% sustained amputation and NCTI(n=72
AMP+NCTI)
and 73.7% did not sustain either an amputation or an NCTI(n=493
Non-AMP/NCTI). AMP+NCTI had the highest mortality(16.7%) with transport time greater than 60 min. While the AMP+NCTI group had decreasing survival with longer transport times
AMP and Non-AMP/NCTI did not exhibit the same trend.Conclusions: A decreased transport time from the point of injury to a medical treatment facility was associated with decreased mortality in patients who suffered a combination of amputation injury and NCTI. No significant association between transport time and outcomes was found in patients who did not sustain NCTI. Priority for rapid evacuation of combat casualties should be given to those with NCTI.
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