Pathophysiology of Endovascular Resuscitation

in Endovascular Trauma Management

Applied

Type

Modification

Confidence

90%

Created

Mar 26, 2026

Evidence

2 sources

Rationale

The section was updated to include the formal publication of the UK-REBOA trial and an updated review on REBOA complications. These additions reinforce the existing cautionary tone regarding REBOA use in trauma. Per the instructions, all medical abbreviations were expanded on their first use within the section to ensure clarity for a textbook audience.

Content Changes

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Hemorrhagic shock produces progressive **oxygen debt** and a self-reinforcing cycle of hypoperfusion, acidosis, hypothermia, and coagulopathy (“lethal triad/lethal diamond”). Early hemorrhage control and **damage control resuscitation (DCR)** are therefore time-critical. [@rotondo1993] [@spahn2019]

**Where endovascular trauma management (EVTM) fits in DCR**

EVTMEndovascular trauma management (EVTM) complements DCR by providing **rapid proximal or selective hemorrhage control** (e.g., resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA), selective balloon occlusion, embolization, covered stents/stent-grafts) that can shorten time-to-hemostasis and reduce the duration of profound shock while definitive surgical/interventional radiology (IR) control is arranged. [@morrison2014] [@trauma2016-endovascular] However, the clinical benefit of REBOA remains a subject of intense debate; recent evidence from the UK-REBOA randomized clinical trial (RCT) indicated that the addition of REBOA to standard care in the emergency department (ED) did not improve survival and may even increase mortality, potentially due to procedural delays or complicationscomplications. [@jansen2026].[@jansen2026] [@jansen2026-b]

**Physiologic principles of aortic balloon occlusion**

- **Complete occlusionREBOA (cREBOA):** maximizes proximal perfusion but risks severe distal ischemia, reperfusion injury, and procedural complications such as vascular access site injury orinjury, arterial thrombosis;thrombosis, or pseudoaneurysm; use the **shortest feasible occlusion time** and transition quickly to definitive control. [@bulger2019] [@marcelo2024] [@marcelo2024-complications]
- **Partial/intermittent REBOA (pREBOA/iREBOA):** titrated deflation can preserve some distal flow and attenuate metabolic burden compared with continuous complete occlusion, especially as a bridge when definitive hemostasis is not yet achieved. [@sadeghi2018-partial]

**Endovascular hemostasis and preservation of perfusion**

Covered stents and stent-grafts can **exclude arterial disruption while maintaining in-line flow**, which is particularly valuable for junctional vessels (subclavian/axillary/iliac) that are difficult to expose surgically in unstable patients. [@markov2011]

Embolization provides distal/branch control (e.g., pelvic arterial bleeding, solid organ injury) and is commonly integrated into pelvic hemorrhage pathways alongside packing and/or REBOA depending on physiology and resource availability. [@coccolini2017-wses]

For surgical damage control concepts (packing, abbreviated laparotomy, open abdomen strategy), see [[Damage Control Surgery]] and [[Open Abdomen]]. [@wses2018]