Acute Care Surgery
What is Acute Care Surgery?
Medicine, particularly surgery, has become increasingly specialized, with providers developing progressively narrower expertise. Previously, surgical critical care fellowship was the primary pathway for specialization in the management of critically ill and injured patients. Management of "sick" surgical patients, regardless of the underlying surgical etiology, requires flexibility in addition to width and breadth of knowledge to manage a wide spectrum of clinical challenges, including deranged physiology and complex surgical pathology. Balancing an acutely hemorrhaging patient, an elderly patient with severe poly-trauma, a ventilator-dependent patient with an acute abdomen...the list is endless. Acute Care Surgery (ACS) was brought about to ensure that there is access to a specialized physician that can manage a spectrum of critically ill patients, including trauma, emergency general surgery (EGS), and surgical rescue.
Surgical rescue involves the management of procedural complications or clinical situations that require emergent surgical intervention: "airway emergency, hemorrhage, intestinal obstruction, perforated viscus, tube/line/device dysfunction, uncontrolled sepsis with a surgical etiology, visceral ischemia, and wound complication." Management can include the following interventions: "airway intervention, biliary repair/ reconstruction, bowel resection, hernia repair, hemorrhage control, source control of infection, surgeon-guided resuscitation, tube/line/device repair, and wound debridement."(1)
Pillars of Acute Care Surgery