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Preserve Encephalus in Surgery of Trauma: Online survey. (P.E.S.T.O.)
A World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) project
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In which country do you practice? *
Numbers of years of practice in emergency surgery (acute care surgery + trauma): *
During your training in emergency surgery did you perform neurosurgical interventions ? *
Trauma center level: *
Annual number of major trauma admissions [Injury Severity Score (ISS) > 15]: *
Annual number of major trauma patients admissions with associate severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) [Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) < 8]: *
At you center, generally who is the trauma team leader ? *
At your center, usually who insert intracranial pressure (ICP) probe in TBI with polytrauma in emergency setting ? (allowed more than one answer) *
Required
At your center, usually who perform emergency trauma craniotomies in polytrauma patients ? (allowed more than one answer) *
Required
At you center, which percentage of patients at risk of intracranial hypertension undergoing emergency extra-cranial surgery (including radiologic interventional procedures), immediately after admission, has ICP monitoring ? *
At you center, do you have a protocol to standardize ICP monitoring  in patients at risk of intracranial hypertension undergoing emergency extra-cranial surgery (including radiologic interventional procedures) ? *
In our daily clinical practice, you consider safe the placement of an ICP monitor with these coagulation parameters (platelets count): *
In our daily clinical practice, you consider safe the placement of an ICP monitor with these coagulation parameters [Prothrombin Time (PT)/ Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (APTT)]: *
How important is ICP monitoring in patients at risk of intracranial hypertension undergoing emergency extra cranial surgery (including radiologic interventional procedures) ? *
In patients at risk of intracranial hypertension undergoing emergency extra-cranial surgery (including radiologic interventional procedures), without ICP monitoring, you consider safe a systolic arterial pressure: *
In patients at risk of intracranial hypertension undergoing emergency extra cranial surgery (including radiologic interventional procedures), without ICP monitoring, you consider safe a mean arterial pressure: *
At your center, which percentage of patients needing both an emergency neurosurgical intervention (ex. hematoma evacuation) and an emergency extracranial surgical operation undergo simultaneous multi-system surgery* (intracranial +/- abdominal +/- thoracic +/- pelvic, etc.) ?  *(including radiologic interventional procedures) *
At you center, do you have a protocol to standardize emergency simultaneous multi-system surgery* (intracranial +/- abdominal +/- thoracic +/- pelvic, etc.) ?  *(including radiologic interventional procedures) *
In our daily clinical practice, you consider safe a craniotomy with these coagulation parameters (platelets count): *
In our daily clinical practice, you consider safe a craniotomy with these coagulation parameters [Prothrombin Time (PT)/ Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time (APTT)]: *
How important is the ability to perform an emergency simultaneous multisystem surgery* (intracranial +/- abdominal +/- thoracic +/- pelvic, etc.) in acute care setting ? *(including radiologic interventional procedures) *
In polytrauma patients undergoing damage control resuscitation usually you transfuse red blood cells (RBCs)/plasma (P)/platelets (PLTs) at a ratio of: *
In polytrauma with TBI patients undergoing damage control resuscitation usually you transfuse RBCs/P/PLTs at a ratio of: *
In polytrauma patients with ICP monitoring and intracranial hypertension, do you consider/monitor extra-cranial pressures (such as intrathoracic pressure and abdominal pressure) ? *
Name, affiliation, email *
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