6th Edition

Manual of Definitive Surgical Trauma Care Incorporating Definitive Anaesthetic Trauma Care

Edited By Kenneth D Boffard, Jonathan White Copyright 2024
    574 Pages 44 Color & 87 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    574 Pages 44 Color & 87 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    574 Pages 44 Color & 87 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Developed for the International Association for Trauma Surgery and Intensive Care (IATSIC), the Manual of Definitive Surgical Trauma Care 6e is ideal for training all surgeons and anaesthetists who manage trauma on an infrequent basis.

    The Manual is updated every 4 years and reflects the most recent developments in patient management based on new evidence-based information. Its focus is on the importance of the multidisciplinary care of the trauma surgical patient. This sixth edition has evolved, and the all-important section on the Non-Technical Skills which are required has been expanded. A significant number of the original guidelines in trauma have been archived, as they are no longer pertinent or have been superseded. The increasing (and occasionally harmful) role of non-operative management (NOM) has been recognized. The ‘Military Environments’ and ‘Austere Environments’ chapters have been substantially revised to reflect current multinational combat experience, and broadened to reflect modern asymmetrical conflicts and the increased need for humanitarian intervention including military peacekeeping in which only one side wears a uniform. Military weapons are used in major cities against the civilian population. More recently, urban, non-military populations have been the targets and victims of heavy military combat including use of ultra-sophisticated weaponry. Each situation carries its own spectrum of injury and responsibility of care.

    Including website access to a selection of videos which provide an anatomic overview of surgical approaches, this resource provides a gold standard educational and training resource to help prepare the relatively fully trained surgeon to manage the difficult injuries that might present to a major trauma centre.

    Video Contents

    Preface

    About the Editors
    Board of Contributors

    Part 1 Trauma System and Communication Principles

    1.      Introduction

    2.      Non-technical skills in Major Trauma (NOTSS): The Role of Crew Resource Management (CRM) and Communication

    Part 2 Physiology and the Body’s Response to Trauma

    3.      Resuscitation Physiology

    4.      Transfusion in Trauma

    5.      Pre-Hospital and Emergency Care

    6.      Damage Control

    Part 3 Anatomical and Organ System Injury

    7.      The Neck

    8.      The Chest

    9.   

    9.1  Abdomen: The Trauma Laparotomy

    9.2  Abdominal Vascular Injury

    9.3  Bowel, Rectum and Diaphragm

    9.4  The Duodenum

    9.5  The Liver and Biliary System

    9.6  Pancreas

    9.7  Spleen

    9.8  The Urogenital System

    10.  The Pelvic

    11.  Extremity Trauma

    12.  Head Trauma

    13.  Burns

    14.  Special Patient Situations

    Part 4 Modern Therapeutic and Diagnostic Technology

    15.  Minimal ACCESS Surgery in Trauma

    16.  Imaging in Trauma

    Part 5 Specialised Aspects of Total Trauma Care

    17.  Critical Care of the Trauma Patient 2023

    18.  Trauma Anaesthesia

    19.  Austere Environments

    20.  Military Environments

    21.  Ballistics and Blast Injuries

    22.  Psychology of Trauma

    23.  Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine

    Appendix A Trauma Systems

    Appendix B Trauma Scores and Scoring Systems

    Appendix C Trauma Guidelines

    Appendix D The Definitive Surgical Trauma Care Course: The Definitive Anaesthetic Trauma Care Course: Course Requirements

    Appendix E Definitive Surgical Trauma Care™ Course – Core Surgical Skills

    Appendix F Briefing for Operating Room Scrub Nurses

    Index

    Biography

    Professor Ken Boffard is Emeritus Professor of Surgery at the University of the Witwatersrand, Trauma Director at Milpark Hospital, Johannesburg, and previously Head of the Department of Surgery at Johannesburg Hospital and Head of the Johannesburg Hospital Trauma Unit, at the University of the Witwatersrand. He qualified in Johannesburg and trained in Surgery at the Birmingham Accident Hospital and Guy’s Hospital.

    He is past President of the International Society of Surgery (ISS) in Switzerland, and currently serves as Secretary-General of the Society. Past President of the International Association for Trauma Surgery and Intensive Care (IATSIC). He is a Fellow of six Surgical Colleges and has received Honorary Fellowships from the American College of Surgeons, Royal College of Surgeons of Thailand, College of Surgeons of Sri Lanka, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Orthopädie und Unfallchirurgie, the Japanese Association for the Surgery of Trauma, and the Association of Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland. He is an elected Member of the Academy of Master Surgical Educators of the American College of Surgeons.

    His passion is surgical education, and various aspects of trauma resuscitation, intensive care, and regional planning of Trauma Systems. His interests include flying (he is a licensed fixed wing and helicopter pilot), scuba diving, and aeromedical care. His research interests include coagulation, haemostasis and critical bleeding.

    He is a Colonel in the South African Military Health Service.

    He is a Freeman of the City of London by redemption, and an elected Liveryman of the Guild of Air Pilots of London.

    He is married with two children.

    Jonathan White is a consultant anaesthetist and intensivist working in Denmark. He studied at Cambridge University, UK, qualifying in 1998 and trained as an anaesthetist and Intensivist at Copenhagen University Hospital, becoming a specialist in Denmark in 2003. He has been affiliated to DSATC for 12 years and has held the post as Chairman of DATC organisation.

    He is head of education and simulation on the ICU and has responsibility for trauma and airway management.

    He has 4 children and a lot of energy.