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REBOA: Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta

The use of Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta (REBOA) has become a topic of considerable interest as of late, primarily to treat non-compressible truncal hemorrhage (NCTH). However, it is beginning to expand into other causes of non-compressible bleeding.  Why do we care? Bleeding is the 2nd leading cause of traumatic death behind only traumatic brain injury (TBI). Additionally, it is the number one cause of preventable death in trauma, causing 85% of all preventable trauma deaths.  Furthermore, 35% of all pre-hospital deaths and over 40% of deaths within the first 24 hours following trauma are attributed to bleeding (Kauvar, Lefering, & Wade, 2006).  One article states that there are around 60 000 civilian deaths per year in the US secondary to traumatic bleeding (Sauaia et al., 1995). Is this REBOA thing new?! Nope. 
The concept and use of REBOA has been around since at least 1954, when Lieutenant Colonel Carl Hughes of the US military published an article desc…

The Top 10 Most Important Articles of 2016 (and some from 2015)

This is a summary of a talk given by Drs. Krishan Yadav and Maggie Kisilewicz at the National Capital Conference in Emergency Medicine. Below are brief summaries and a bottom line, but of course you'll have to read the literature yourself to make your own decisions! 1) Intensive Blood-Pressure Lowering in Patients with Acute Cerebral Hemorrhage ATACH-2  Qureshi et al. N Engl J Med 2016; 375: 1033 – 1043.
DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1603460.

• RCT to assess if aggressive SBP reduction within 4.5 hours of spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage results in decreased death or disability at 3 months.
• Main Finding: No difference in death or disability at 3 months for Intensive BP (110 – 139 mmHg) vs. Standard BP (140 – 179 mmHg) group.
o Caution: this trial really compared SBP targets of 129 mmHg vs. 141 mmHg (see Figure 1)
• Bottom Line: BP reduction to 140 mmHg is safe. Aim for a SBP target of 160 mmHg in 
spontaneous ICH – if the patient continues to deteriorate, revise target to 140 mmHg.

2) 

Blood, Salt, and CTs: An Update in Trauma for 2016

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