Unlabelled: Haemodynamically unstability after severe abdominal injuries requires a new therapeutic strategy. European guidelines recommend: reduced time, non-invasive investigations, avoid massive volemic replacement before surgery. The primary aim of Damage Control Resuscitation protocol is to prevent the lethal triad: hypothermia, acidosis and coagulopathy. The treatment includes contemporary: permissive hypotension, haemostatic resuscitation, and Damage Control Surgery (DCS). Systolic pressure below the physiological limits maximize the benefits of resuscitation and haemostasis, decreasing vessel clots expulsion. Haemostatic resuscitation uses blood components and substitutes, to allow volemic replacement and to avoid trauma-induced coagulopathy (25% - 30% of complex trauma). The use of PRBCs and plasma 1 to 1 is an independent survival predictor in patients undergoing DCS. Military haemostatic resuscitation protocol suggests massive transfusion using 10 or more PRBCs during 24 or 6 hours if 3 or more triggers are present: pressure > 90, hemoglobin > 11 g, temperature < 35.5°C, INR > 1.5, base deficit
Key Words: Major abdominal trauma, Traumatic induced coagulopathy, Uncontrolled bleeding.

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