EBQ:Delayed Fluid Resuscitation in Trauma
Complete Journal Club Article
Bickell WH, Wall MJ Jr, Pepe PE, et al.. "Immediate versus Delayed Fluid Resuscitation for Hypotensive Patients with Penetrating Torso Injuries". N Engl J Med. 1994. 331(17):1105-1109.
PubMed Full text
PubMed Full text
Clinical Question
Does delaying aggressive fluid resuscitation until operative intervention improve survival in hypotensive patients with penetrating torso injuries?
Conclusion
- Delayed fluid resuscitation until operative intervention was associated with improved survival and fewer complications in hypotensive patients with penetrating torso injuries
- Immediate resuscitation may worsen hemorrhage by increasing blood pressure before surgical control of bleeding
Major Points
- This was a landmark study that challenged the standard practice of aggressive prehospital and ED fluid resuscitation in trauma
- Survival was significantly higher in the delayed resuscitation group (70% vs 62%, p=0.04)
- Delayed resuscitation was associated with shorter hospital stays and fewer complications (ARDS, renal failure, coagulopathy, wound infection)
- The concept of "permissive hypotension" in trauma resuscitation was largely influenced by this study
- Results were specific to penetrating torso trauma in an urban setting with short transport times
Study Design
- Prospective, controlled clinical trial
- Single center: Ben Taub General Hospital, Houston, Texas
- N = 598 adult patients with penetrating torso injuries and prehospital SBP <=90 mmHg
- Study period: 1990-1993
- Primary Outcome: survival to hospital discharge
Population
Patient Demographics
- Mean age: 31 years
- Male: 96%
- Gunshot wounds: 59%, Stab wounds: 41%
- Mean prehospital SBP: 72 mmHg (immediate) vs 79 mmHg (delayed)
Inclusion Criteria
- Age >=16 years
- Penetrating torso injury
- Prehospital SBP <=90 mmHg
Exclusion Criteria
- GCS <=8 (isolated head injury)
- Transfer from another facility
- Transport time >30 minutes
Interventions
- Immediate resuscitation group (n=309): Standard IV fluid resuscitation beginning in the prehospital setting and continuing in the ED
- Delayed resuscitation group (n=289): IV access obtained but fluids withheld until patient was in the operating room
- Both groups received standard surgical management
Outcomes
Primary Outcome
- Survival to hospital discharge:
- Delayed resuscitation: 203/289 (70%)
- Immediate resuscitation: 193/309 (62%)
- p = 0.04
Secondary Outcomes
- Postoperative complications were lower in the delayed group:
- ARDS: 2% vs 7%
- Acute renal failure: 1% vs 4%
- Coagulopathy: 1% vs 4%
- Wound infection: 5% vs 11%
- Shorter hospital stay in delayed group: 11 vs 14 days
Criticisms
- Not a true randomized trial; allocation was based on alternating days, which may introduce bias
- Single-center study in an urban trauma center with short transport times; may not apply to rural settings
- Only included penetrating trauma; results should not be extrapolated to blunt trauma
- Baseline differences between groups (injury severity, mechanism) may have confounded results
- The study has never been replicated in a true randomized fashion due to ethical concerns
- Concept of permissive hypotension has been broadened well beyond the original study population
Funding
- None reported
