Most deaths after trauma occur in the pre-hospital phase of care. Death from critical bleeding is the most common preventable cause. This body of research has a focus on management of critical bleeding after trauma during the pre-hospital phase and during resuscitation in-hospital. Developments in early management of traumatic coagulopathy, emphasis on rapid haemorrhage control and massive transfusion activation is highlighted in our research.
Shock. 2014;42(4):307-12
Mitra B, Gabbe BJ, Kaukonen KM, Olaussen A, Cooper DJ, Cameron PA.
ANZ J Surg. 2013;83(12):918-23
Mitra B, O'Reilly G, Cameron PA, Zatta A, Gruen RL.
Burns Trauma. 2019;7:22
Mitra B, Bade-Boon J, Fitzgerald MC, Beck B, Cameron PA
Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2017;30(2):265-276
Winearls J, Mitra B, Reade MC
Vox Sang. 2020;115(2):189-195
Vasudeva M, Mathew JK, Fitzgerald MC, Cheung Z, Mitra B
Emergency Medicine Australasia, December 2019. doi: 10.1111/1742-6723.13443
Mark Fitzgerald, Robbie Lendrum, Stephen Bernard, John Moloney, De Villiers Smit, Joseph Mathew, Yesul Kim, Christopher Nickson, Richard Lin, Meei Yeung, Adam Bystrzycki, Louise Niggemeyer, Simon Hendel, Biswadev Mitra
Annals of Surgery, March 2019, 269(3), e29-e30. doi:10.1097/sla.00000000000031422018 Published with invited commentary from Amy Goldberg MD
Mark C Fitzgerald, Patryck Lloyd-Donald, De Villiers Smit, Joseph Mathew, Yesul Kim, Jin Tee, Yashbir Dewan, Biswadev Mitra
Emerg Med Australas. 2014. Epub 2014/04/10. DOI:10.1111/1742-6723.12232
Olaussen A, Blackburn T, Mitra B, Fitzgerald M