The utility of venous lactate to triage injured patients in the trauma center.

BACKGROUND Field triage criteria for trauma patients results in over-triage rates of 30% to 50% to achieve under-triage rates of 10%. This large number of patients may stress trauma center resources. Elevated arterial lactate (ALAC) levels have been shown to be a marker of serious injury but the need for arterial sampling limits the utility of the determination. The goal of this study was: 1) to determine the correlation between venous lactate (VLAC) and ALAC; 2) to determine whether VLAC could identify those patients with serious injuries; and 3) to compare an elevated VLAC level against standard triage criteria (STC) in their ability to identify major injury. STUDY DESIGN Arterial and venous samples for blood gas and lactate analyses were obtained in 375 patients within 10 minutes of patient arrival to the trauma center. Arterial and venous samples were drawn within 2 minutes of each other, placed on ice, and analyzed within 10 minutes of sampling. The location of sampling was left to physician discretion. Data collected included injury mechanism, demographics, admission vital signs, emergency department disposition, length of stay, and injury severity scores (ISS). Admission to the ICU, need for emergency operation, length of stay, and death were noted. Emergency medical service staff were queried to determine which standard triage criteria (STC) were fulfilled. RESULTS The mean ALAC was 3.11 mmol/L (SD 3.45, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.67 to 3.55) and mean VLAC was 3.43 mmol/L (SD 3.41, 95% CI 2.96 to 3.90). There was no significant difference between ALAC and VLAC. The correlation between ALAC and VLAC was 0.94 (95% CI 0.94 to 0.96, p = 0.0001). An elevated VLAC predicted moderate to severe injury and there was a significant association between an increased lactate and maximum Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS) of 4 and 5 (ANOVA, F = 8.26, p < 0.001). Patients with VLAC > or =2 mmol/L had significantly increased relative risks of ISS > or = 13, death, admission to the ICU, and length of stay > 2 days. In comparison with STC, a VLAC > or = 2 mmol/L decreased undertriage in patients with ISS > or = 13 by one half (11% versus 24%) for patients with ISS > or = 13 and decreased over-triage by 28% (46% versus 64%). These data were most pronounced for patients injured in motor vehicle collisions. CONCLUSIONS VLAC is an excellent approximation for ALAC. A VLAC > or = 2 mmol/L appears to predict an ISS > or = 13, the need for ICU resources, and prolonged hospital stays. VLAC was significantly better than STC in all patients and was most useful in victims of blunt trauma, especially motor vehicle collisions.

[1]  J. D. Phillips,et al.  Financial analysis of an inner-city helicopter service: charges versus collections. , 1989, Annals of emergency medicine.

[2]  C. Shatney,et al.  Trauma team activation for 'mechanism of injury' blunt trauma victims: time for a change? , 1993, The Journal of trauma.

[3]  J. Koehler,et al.  Prehospital Index: a scoring system for field triage of trauma victims. , 1985, Annals of emergency medicine.

[4]  James W. Davis,et al.  BASE DEFICIT IN THE ELDERLY , 1998 .

[5]  P. Knudson,et al.  Improving the field triage of major trauma victims. , 1988, The Journal of trauma.

[6]  T. Buchman,et al.  Optimizing prehospital triage criteria for trauma team alerts. , 1993, The Journal of trauma.

[7]  D. Fife,et al.  Empirical development and evaluation of prehospital trauma triage instruments. , 1985, The Journal of trauma.

[8]  J. Siegel,et al.  Validation of a hand-held lactate device in determination of blood lactate in critically injured patients. , 1998, Critical care medicine.

[9]  E. Søreide,et al.  Prehospital trauma care , 2001 .

[10]  T. Scalea,et al.  Lactate clearance and survival following injury. , 1993, The Journal of trauma.

[11]  T. Esposito,et al.  Do prehospital trauma center triage criteria identify major trauma victims? , 1995, Archives of surgery.

[12]  J. Falk,et al.  Lactic acidosis in critical illness , 1992, Critical care medicine.

[13]  James W. Davis,et al.  The relationship of base deficit to lactate in porcine hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation. , 1994, The Journal of trauma.

[14]  A. Sauaia,et al.  Early predictors of postinjury multiple organ failure. , 1994, Archives of surgery.

[15]  H. Champion,et al.  Trauma triage: vehicle damage as an estimate of injury severity. , 1989, The Journal of trauma.

[16]  W. Baxt,et al.  The failure of prehospital trauma prediction rules to classify trauma patients accurately. , 1989, Annals of emergency medicine.

[17]  J. Siegel,et al.  Oxygen debt and metabolic acidemia as quantitative predictors of mortality and the severity of the ischemic insult in hemorrhagic shock , 1991, Critical care medicine.