Bulletin of Emergency and Trauma (Apr 2020)

Tranexamic Acid; A Glittering Player in the Field of Trauma

  • Fariborz Ghaffarpasand,
  • Hamid Reza Abbasi,
  • Shahram Paydar,
  • Shahram Bolandparvaz,
  • Maryam Dehghankhalili

DOI
https://doi.org/10.30476/beat.2020.46443
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 53 – 55

Abstract

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Trauma is still the leading cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide with an estimated 5.8 million mortalities every year [1] and approximately 60 million traumatic brain injuries (TBI) annually [2]. Hemorrhage remains the most common preventable cause of mortality and morbidity following trauma either in civilian or military settings [3, 4]. Intracranial bleeding following TBI results in increased intracranial pressure (ICP), brain herniation and cerebral edema which are all secondary insults to the brain parenchyma leading to increase disability and mortality [5]. Thus, the development and administration of antifibrinolytic agents have been the focus of traumatic injuries during the previous decades with the hypothesis of hemorrhage cessation and hemostasis with a medical agent rather than a surgical intervention. These efforts resulted in developing several agents and subsequent large multicenter clinical trials to define the best antifibrinolytic agent for prevention of death following TBI.

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