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Femoral Artery Injury
Bjorn, Pret pbjorn at emh.orgFri Nov 30 13:57:34 GMT 2007
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Further pursuing the hypotheticals and scratching around for informative controversy: Various media reports put this victim in surgery for "several hours" during the acute phase (I've heard as few as seven and as many as eleven). I'm wondering why damage control for this injury in an unstable patient would extend beyond tens of minutes. Takes me back to the child in Florida who had his arm ripped off by a shark some years ago: arrived in extremis, reportedly coded once or twice, but nonetheless underwent something like eight hours of surgery to reattach his arm. Is there something about Taylor's injury that might require an improbably LONG life-saving procedure -- or is it possible that everyone got too invested in that leg? Pret Bjorn, RN Bangor, ME USA -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Robert F. Smith Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2007 10:27 PM To: 'Trauma & Critical Care mailing list' Subject: RE: Femoral Artery Injury I don't know if this is what Dr. Mattox is alluding to, but when special people get treated "specially" often bad things happen. We stop doing what we routinely do and invent new way to approach injuries that are not totally unique. I seriously doubt that this professional athlete had more thigh flesh than many of our trauma patients. I was not there and don't know anything about the case. Rob Smith -- trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/
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