blunt chest trauma has a survival rate following cardiac arrest of only 1-2%
blunt chest trauma with pericardial tamponade on US_FAST in a trauma centre has a survival rate of 70-80% if tamponade is promptly diagnosed and treated
gun shot penetrative chest trauma has a survival rate of only 2-4%
abdominal trauma has a survival rate of only 4-5%
non-gun-shot penetrating chest trauma (eg. knife stabbings) have a survival rate of ~9-18% if there were signs of life witnessed prior to the procedure 1)
in a follow up study of an urban US trauma centre's 37 survivors following emergency department thoracotomy over an 11 year period 2):
10% died after hospitalisation
74% of hospital survivors had long-term social, cognitive, functional, or psychological impairment
48% had impaired cognition and limited capacity to return to normal activity
24% required assistance with activities of daily living
13% were wheelchair dependent
the aims of resuscitative thoracotomy may include:
release of cardiac tamponade (pericardial decompression)
temporary haemorrhage control
treatment of air embolism
internal cardiac massage
cross-clamping of descending thoracic aorta to control abdominal bleeding?
resuscitative thoracotomy poses major risks to the treating team in terms of blood borne infection risk with low survival rates for the patient and thus should only be done if there are no contraindications, and if there are accepted indications as outlined below
ie. if you are not at a major trauma service then this procedure probably should NOT be done!
contra-indications for resuscitative thoracotomy
no electrical activity on ECG
improperly trained team
insufficient equipment
severe head injury
severe multisystem injury
non-traumatic cardiac arrest
penetrating abdominal trauma without previously witnessed cardiac activity
blunt injury without previously witnessed cardiac activity
indications for resuscitative thoracotomy
if patient can be resuscitated to BP > 70mmHg and adequately stable, emergency thoracotomy in theatre may be considered instead of in the ED resus room
penetrative chest trauma with either:
unresponsive hypotension with systolic BP < 70mmHg despite iv fluids and pleural decompression, and a FAST positive for pericardial tamponade
a ventilated patient who is haemodynamically unstable on arrival to ED with suspected pericardial tamponade
blunt chest trauma and either:
rapid exsanguination from a chest tube of at least 1500mL blood
unresponsive hypotension with systolic BP < 70mmHg despite iv fluids and a FAST positive for pericardial tamponade
relative indications:
penetrative trunk trauma with either:
chest wound with traumatic arrest without previously witnessed cardiac activity
other wound with traumatic arrest with previously witnessed cardiac activity
blunt chest trauma with:
traumatic arrest with previously witnessed cardiac activity
place in 10deg Trendelenberg to reduce risk of cerebral air embolism
iv fluid resuscitation aiming for systolic BP 70-90mmHg
avoid tidal volumes > 0.6mL/kg
avoid PEEP until pericardium is decompressed
avoid iv fluids and inotropes once pericardium is decompressed and wound controlled as there is risk of rebound hypertension and excessive filling, or increased haemorrhage
aspirate cardiac chambers once wound is opposed to reduce risk of air embolism