Management of Bleeding Diathesis in Elective and Orthopaedic Trauma: A Review
Recommended Citation
Mansour DT, Court TA, Bishop CR, and Vaidya R. Management of Bleeding Diathesis in Elective and Orthopaedic Trauma: A Review. J Am Acad Orthop Surg 2024.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2024
Publication Title
The Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Abstract
There is a general need among orthopaedic surgeons for practical advice on managing patients with bleeding disorders. Appropriate diagnosis and management of these disorders is paramount once discovered before, during, or after the patient's surgical course. Bleeding disorders disrupt the body's ability to control bleeding, commonly through platelet function and blood clotting. Normally, the vessel contracts and retracts once disruption of blood vessels occurs, limiting blood loss. Blood platelets adhere to exposed collagen, aggregate at the site, and obstruct blood loss. Because platelet aggregates are temporary, blood clotting is needed to back up the platelet plug and provide a milieu for the healing process that completes the hemostatic events. Disorders that interfere with any of these events can result in hemorrhage, drainage, or rebleeding. Bleeding disorders are a group of conditions, either hereditary or acquired, marked by abnormal or excessive bleeding and/or bruising. The most effective methods for assessing coagulation disorders include a detailed history and a series of blood tests. Clinical examination findings are notable but may be less specific. If a surgical patient has a bleeding disorder discovered preoperatively, postoperatively, or intraoperatively, treatments exist with medications, surgical management, interventional radiology procedures, and replacement therapy.
PubMed ID
39378371
ePublication
ePub ahead of print