Medicine:Trauma triad of death

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Short description: Combination of hypothermia, acidosis, and coagulopathy
Trauma triad of death
Medical diagnostics
Trauma triad of death.svg
Triad of death

The trauma triad of death is a medical term describing the combination of hypothermia, acidosis, and coagulopathy.[1] This combination is commonly seen in patients who have sustained severe traumatic injuries and results in a significant rise in the mortality rate.[2] Commonly, when someone presents with these signs, damage control surgery is employed to reverse the effects.[citation needed]

The three conditions share a complex relationship; each factor can compound the others, resulting in high mortality if this positive feedback loop continues uninterrupted.[citation needed]

Severe bleeding in trauma diminishes oxygen delivery, and may lead to hypothermia. This in turn can halt the coagulation cascade, preventing blood from clotting. In the absence of blood-bound oxygen and nutrients (hypoperfusion), the body's cells burn glucose anaerobically for energy, causing the release of lactic acid, ketone bodies, and other acidic compounds into the blood stream, which lower the blood's pH, leading to metabolic acidosis. Such an increase in acidity damages the tissues and organs of the body and can reduce myocardial performance, further reducing the oxygen delivery.[citation needed]

References

  1. Mikhail, J. (Feb 1999), "The trauma triad of death: hypothermia, acidosis, and coagulopathy", AACN Clin Issues 10 (1): 85–94, doi:10.1097/00044067-199902000-00008, PMID 10347389 
  2. Lewis, Anne Marie (Mar 2000), "Trauma triad of death emergency", Nursing 30 (3): 62–4, doi:10.1097/00152193-200030030-00028, PMID 11000823 

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