Type

Addition

Confidence

62%

Created

Mar 27, 2026

Evidence

2 sources

Rationale

Two articles were evaluated for integration. Article 1 (Deng H et al. Partial resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta as a resuscitative strategy in traumatic hemorrhagic shock: A retrospective analysis of a Chinese single-center cohort. Chin J Traumatol. 2026. PMID: 41862314., PMID 41862314) is a retrospective single-center Chinese cohort study on pREBOA in traumatic hemorrhagic shock. Despite being classified as 'guideline' by the metadata, it is observational in design and therefore carries moderate confidence (0.55). It is most appropriately integrated into the existing pREBOA paragraph as a supporting but caveated addition, reflecting geographic diversity in the evidence base without overstating the strength of a single retrospective series. Article 2 (Wagner HJ et al. Endovascular management of haemorrhage and vascular lesions in patients with multiple and/or severe injuries: a systematic review and clinical practice guideline update. Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg. 2025. PMID: 39820621., PMID 39820621) is a systematic review and clinical practice guideline update on endovascular hemorrhage management — directly relevant to the 'Evidence and limitations' section. It was flagged for review due to a lower relevance score (63/100), likely because a related Wagner 2025 reference (wagner 2025) already exists in the chapter. However, the two references appear to be distinct publications (different DOIs and PMIDs), and the guideline update article adds meaningful reinforcement to the existing evidence bullet. It was therefore added as a co-citation alongside wagner 2025 in the final evidence bullet rather than as a standalone new bullet, keeping citation density consistent with the original section. No existing content was removed, no headings were altered, the table structure was fully preserved, and all widget hints were maintained. The geographic guideline balance principle was observed — no European citations were displaced.

Content Changes

<!-- type: treatment -->

Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) is a temporizing technique for **noncompressible torso hemorrhage (NCTH)** in profoundly unstable patients, intended as a **bridge** to definitive hemorrhage control (operating room [OR], hybrid OR, or interventional radiology [IR]). [@bulger2019] [@wagner2025]

Appropriate systems require training, governance, and time targets. [@bulger2019]

<!-- type: classification -->

**Table 16.1. REBOA Aortic Zones and Deployment Guidelines** [@bulger2019]

| **Zone** | **Anatomical Boundaries** | **Typical Indication** | **Practical Time Target** |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **Zone I** | Left subclavian artery to celiac axis | Suspected intra-abdominal/torso hemorrhage | Keep as short as possible (often ≤30 min) |
| **Zone II** | Celiac axis to lowest renal artery | **Avoid inflation** | N/A |
| **Zone III** | Infrarenal aorta to bifurcation | Pelvic/junctional hemorrhage | Keep as short as possible (often ≤60 min) |

**Patient selection (systems-level safety)**

- Consider REBOA when: **profound shock** with suspected NCTH and an immediately available pathway to definitive hemostasis (hybrid OR/OR/IR). [@bulger2019] [@wagner2025]
- Avoid/strongly caution when: major thoracic bleeding proximal to Zone I, suspected aortic rupture/dissection, or when definitive control is not rapidly achievable (risk of prolonged ischemia). [@bulger2019] [@isselbacher2022]

**Technique essentials**

- Prefer ultrasound-guided common femoral artery (CFA) access; confirm intraluminal wire position prior to upsizing. [@bulger2019]
- Inflate using physiologic endpoints (proximal blood pressure [BP] response) and confirm position with imaging when available.
- Define the “bridge"bridge endpoint”endpoint" before inflation: **(1) laparotomy, (2) pelvic packing + angio, (3) endograft/covered stent**, or a hybrid combination. [@trauma2016-endovascular]

**Partial and intermittent REBOA**

Titrated balloon deflation, including partial REBOA (pREBOA) or intermittent REBOA (iREBOA), may reduce distal ischemia and reperfusion burden during bridging, particularly when transport or procedural delays occur; it requires continuous hemodynamic monitoring and an experienced team. [@sadeghi2018-partial] [@wagner2025] Single-center retrospective data from a Chinese cohort further support pREBOA as a feasible resuscitative strategy in traumatic hemorrhagic shock, with findings suggesting hemodynamic stabilization benefits, though the evidence remains limited by study design and patient selection. [@deng2026]

**Evidence and limitations**

- Multicenter observational data (e.g., AORTA registry) demonstrate feasibility and define complication profiles, but outcomes are highly dependent on indication, timing, and comparator choice. [@trauma2016-aorta]
- Comparative observational analyses versus resuscitative thoracotomy show mixed results and are vulnerable to selection bias; REBOA benefit is most plausible when used early with rapid transition to definitive hemostasis. [@brenner2018-survival]
- National datasets also suggest substantial practice variability and reinforce the need for protocolized use. [@matsumura2020]
- Updated systematic reviews and clinical practice guidelines reinforce the role of endovascular management for hemorrhage in severely injured patients, emphasizing protocolized use and multidisciplinary coordination. [@wagner2025] [@wagner2025-g]

See also: [[Damage Control Surgery]] and [[Massive Transfusion]] for coordinated damage control resuscitation (DCR) during balloon occlusion and deflation. [@spahn2019]