Complement and coagulation cascades in trauma

Trauma remains a major cause of death throughout the world, especially for patients younger than 45 years. Due to rapid advances in clinical management, both in the acute and prehospital settings, trauma patients survive devastating injuries at unprecedented rates. However, these patients can often...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acute medicine & surgery 2019-10, Vol.6 (4), p.329-335
Hauptverfasser: Satyam, Abhigyan, Graef, Elizabeth R., Lapchak, Peter H., Tsokos, Maria G., Dalle Lucca, Jurandir J., Tsokos, George C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Trauma remains a major cause of death throughout the world, especially for patients younger than 45 years. Due to rapid advances in clinical management, both in the acute and prehospital settings, trauma patients survive devastating injuries at unprecedented rates. However, these patients can often face life threatening complications that stem from the robust innate immune response induced by severe hemorrhage, leading to further tissue injury rather than repair. The complement and coagulation cascades are key mediators in this disordered reaction, which includes the development of trauma‐induced coagulopathy. There is increasing evidence that cross‐talk between these two pathways allows rapid amplification of their otherwise targeted responses and contributes to overwhelming and prolonged systemic inflammation. In this article, we summarize the initial steps of innate immune response to trauma and review the complex complement and coagulation cascades, as well as how they interact with each other. Despite progress in understanding these cascades, effective therapeutic targets have yet to be found and further research is needed both to improve survival rates as well as decrease associated morbidity. Activation of complement and coagulation cascades after tissue injury is highly interconnected. In this article, we summarize the initial steps of the innate immune response to trauma and review the complex complement and coagulation cascades, as well as how they interact with each other.
ISSN:2052-8817
2052-8817
DOI:10.1002/ams2.426