Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma

Implementation of the ATLS algorithm has remarkably improved the resuscitation of trauma patients and has significantly contributed to the systematic management of multi-trauma patients. However, pain remains the most prevalent complaint in trauma patients, and can induce severe complications, furth...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saranteas Theodosios, Kostroglou Andreas, Anagnostopoulos Dimitrios, Giannoulis Dimitrios, Vasiliou Pantelis, Mavrogenis Andreas F.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:SICOT-J
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sicot-j.org/articles/sicotj/full_html/2019/01/sicotj180114/sicotj180114.html
id doaj-e6510fd5a62148bd97779a5340621019
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e6510fd5a62148bd97779a53406210192021-03-02T09:57:20ZengEDP SciencesSICOT-J2426-88872019-01-0152810.1051/sicotj/2019028sicotj180114Pain is vital in resuscitation in traumaSaranteas TheodosiosKostroglou AndreasAnagnostopoulos DimitriosGiannoulis DimitriosVasiliou PantelisMavrogenis Andreas F.Implementation of the ATLS algorithm has remarkably improved the resuscitation of trauma patients and has significantly contributed to the systematic management of multi-trauma patients. However, pain remains the most prevalent complaint in trauma patients, and can induce severe complications, further deterioration of health, and death of the patient. Providing appropriate and timely pain management to these patients prompts early healing, reduces stress response, shortens hospital Length of Stay (LOS), diminishes chronic pain, and ultimately reduces morbidity and mortality. Pain has been proposed to be evaluated as the fifth vital sign and be recorded in the vital sign charts in order to emphasize the importance of pain on short- and long-term outcomes of the patients. However, although the quality of pain treatment seems to be improving we believe that pain has been underestimated in trauma. This article aims to provide evidence for the importance of pain in trauma, to support its management in the emergency setting and the acute phase of patients’ resuscitation, and to emphasize on the necessity to introduce the letter P (pain) in the ATLS alphabet.https://www.sicot-j.org/articles/sicotj/full_html/2019/01/sicotj180114/sicotj180114.htmlTraumaPainATLSAnesthesiaFractures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saranteas Theodosios
Kostroglou Andreas
Anagnostopoulos Dimitrios
Giannoulis Dimitrios
Vasiliou Pantelis
Mavrogenis Andreas F.
spellingShingle Saranteas Theodosios
Kostroglou Andreas
Anagnostopoulos Dimitrios
Giannoulis Dimitrios
Vasiliou Pantelis
Mavrogenis Andreas F.
Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
SICOT-J
Trauma
Pain
ATLS
Anesthesia
Fractures
author_facet Saranteas Theodosios
Kostroglou Andreas
Anagnostopoulos Dimitrios
Giannoulis Dimitrios
Vasiliou Pantelis
Mavrogenis Andreas F.
author_sort Saranteas Theodosios
title Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
title_short Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
title_full Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
title_fullStr Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
title_full_unstemmed Pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
title_sort pain is vital in resuscitation in trauma
publisher EDP Sciences
series SICOT-J
issn 2426-8887
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Implementation of the ATLS algorithm has remarkably improved the resuscitation of trauma patients and has significantly contributed to the systematic management of multi-trauma patients. However, pain remains the most prevalent complaint in trauma patients, and can induce severe complications, further deterioration of health, and death of the patient. Providing appropriate and timely pain management to these patients prompts early healing, reduces stress response, shortens hospital Length of Stay (LOS), diminishes chronic pain, and ultimately reduces morbidity and mortality. Pain has been proposed to be evaluated as the fifth vital sign and be recorded in the vital sign charts in order to emphasize the importance of pain on short- and long-term outcomes of the patients. However, although the quality of pain treatment seems to be improving we believe that pain has been underestimated in trauma. This article aims to provide evidence for the importance of pain in trauma, to support its management in the emergency setting and the acute phase of patients’ resuscitation, and to emphasize on the necessity to introduce the letter P (pain) in the ATLS alphabet.
topic Trauma
Pain
ATLS
Anesthesia
Fractures
url https://www.sicot-j.org/articles/sicotj/full_html/2019/01/sicotj180114/sicotj180114.html
work_keys_str_mv AT saranteastheodosios painisvitalinresuscitationintrauma
AT kostroglouandreas painisvitalinresuscitationintrauma
AT anagnostopoulosdimitrios painisvitalinresuscitationintrauma
AT giannoulisdimitrios painisvitalinresuscitationintrauma
AT vasilioupantelis painisvitalinresuscitationintrauma
AT mavrogenisandreasf painisvitalinresuscitationintrauma
_version_ 1724238159535931392