Protocolized care for early shock resuscitation
Recommended Citation
Goodwin M, Ito K, Gupta AH, and Rivers EP. Protocolized care for early shock resuscitation. Curr Opin Crit Care 2016; 22(5):416-423.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2016
Publication Title
Current opinion in critical care
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Protocolized care for early shock resuscitation (PCESR) has been intensely examined over the last decade. The purpose is to review the pathophysiologic basis, historical origin, clinical applications, components and outcome implications of PCESR.
RECENT FINDINGS: PCESR is a multifaceted systems-based approach that includes early detection of high-risk patients and interventions to rapidly reverse hemodynamic perturbations that result in global or regional tissue hypoxia. It has been applied to perioperative surgery, trauma, cardiology (heart failure and acute myocardial infarction), pulmonary embolus, cardiac arrest, undifferentiated shock, postoperative cardiac surgery and pediatric septic shock. When this approach is used for adult septic shock, in particular, it is associated with a mortality reduction from 46.5 to less than 30% over the last 2 decades. Challenges to these findings are seen when repeated trials contain enrollment, diagnostic and therapeutic methodological differences.
SUMMARY: PCESR is more than a hemodynamic optimization procedure. It also provides an educational framework for the less experienced and objective recognition of clinical improvement or deterioration. It further minimizes practices' variation and provides objective measures that can be audited, evaluated and amendable to continuous quality improvement. As a result, morbidity and mortality are improved.
Medical Subject Headings
Early Diagnosis; Humans; Quality Improvement; Resuscitation; Sepsis; Shock, Septic; Treatment Outcome
PubMed ID
27583584
Volume
22
Issue
5
First Page
416
Last Page
423