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Pulmonary embolism occurring early after major trauma.

BMJ Case Reports 2019 September 21
Pulmonary embolism (PE) secondary to trauma is the third most common cause of death in trauma patients who have survived 24 hours following injury. We describe a case of PE diagnosed within 3 hours of a major trauma in a previously well adolescent female. The early occurrence of PE in this case is at odds with what is generally reported (3-5 days) after major trauma. General consensus is that patients who suffer major trauma move from an initial hypocoaguable state, with increased risk of bleeding, to normocoagulable or hypercoaguable state, with a subsequent increased risk of venothromboembolism. However, Sumislawski et al recently demonstrated that a marginally greater proportion of trauma patients were in fact hypercoaguable rather than hypocoaguable on arrival to hospital and that trauma-induced coagulopathy tended to resolve within 24 hours; such data cause us to re-evaluate when to commence thromboprophylaxis for major trauma patients.

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