Pathophysiology of Concurrent Trauma and Exsanguinationv

Image

Journal of Surgery and Anaesthesia is a peer reviewed, open access journal dedicated to publishing research on all aspects of surgery and anaesthesia. This journal aims to keep anaesthesiologists, anaesthetic practitioners, surgeons and surgical researchers up to date by publishing clinical & evidence based research. This scientific Journal leads the specialty in promotion of original research by providing immediate open access to all articles after publication. Journal of Surgery and Anesthesia addresses all aspects of surgery & anesthesia practice, including anesthetic administration, pharmacokinetics, preoperative and postoperative considerations, coexisting disease and other complicating factors, General Surgery, Robotic Surgery, Orthopedic Surgery, GI Surgery, Neurosurgery, Plastic Surgery, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Vascular Surgery, Urology, Surgical Oncology, Radiology, Ophthalmology, Pediatric Surgery, Trauma Services, Minimal Access Surgery, Endocrine Surgery, Colorectal Surgery, Laparoscopic and Endoscopic Techniques and Procedures, Preoperative and Postoperative Patient Management, Complications in Surgery and New Developments in Instrumentation and technology related to surgery, Intra-Operative Regional Anesthesia Administration Techniques, Peri-Operative Pain, Obstetric Anesthesia, Pediatric Anesthesia, General Anesthesia, Sedation, Regional Anesthesia, Outcome Studies and Associated Complications, etc.

We are sharing one of the most cited article from our journal. Article entitled “Pathophysiology of Concurrent Trauma and Exsanguinationv” was well written by Dr. El Rasheid Zakaria.

Editorial

Trauma continues to remain the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the developed countries. Hemorrhage is the second most common cause of death after trauma, only outnumbered by traumatic brain injury. Exsanguinating hemorrhage is the most common cause of mortality in the first hour of arrival to a trauma center and accounts for almost half of deaths in the first 24 h. In addition, about 20-40% of trauma deaths that occur after hospital admission usually involve massive hemorrhage, in which death is potentially preventable. Although the resuscitation protocols and management strategies for resuscitation of patients with exsanguinating hemorrhage have evolved in the past two decades, mortality among these patients remains high.

Here is the link to view complete article: https://www.longdom.org/open-access/pathophysiology-of-concurrent-trauma-and-exsanguinationv.pdf

Submit manuscripts at  https://www.longdom.org/submissions/surgery-anesthesia.html or as an e-mail attachment to surgery@emedsci.com

Media contact

Kate Williams

Editorial Assistant

Journal of Surgery and Anesthesia.

Email: surgery@emedsci.com

What’s App: +1-947-333-4405