## Correct Answer: D. Pulse rate The Revised Trauma Score (RTS) is a physiological scoring system used for rapid triage and prognostication of trauma patients in the emergency department. It comprises exactly three parameters: Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP), and Respiratory Rate (RR). Each parameter is assigned a coded value (0–4), and the sum gives the RTS (range 0–12). Pulse rate, despite being a vital sign, is NOT included in the RTS calculation. This is a deliberate design choice because RTS was developed to be a quick, bedside assessment tool that correlates strongly with injury severity and mortality. The three included parameters (GCS, SBP, RR) capture neurological status, perfusion, and ventilatory function respectively—the core physiological derangements in trauma. Pulse rate is redundant when SBP is already measured, as both reflect cardiovascular status. In Indian trauma centres and ATLS protocols followed across government and private hospitals, RTS remains the standard rapid triage tool. Students often confuse RTS with other scoring systems (ISS, APACHE) or assume all vital signs are included, making pulse rate a common trap. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Systolic blood pressure** — Systolic blood pressure is a core component of RTS. It reflects perfusion status and is coded as: >89 mmHg (4), 76–89 mmHg (3), 50–75 mmHg (2), <50 mmHg (1), no pulse (0). This is a discriminating factor in trauma severity and is always included in RTS calculation. **B. Glasgow coma scale** — GCS is the primary neurological parameter in RTS, coded as: 13–15 (4), 9–12 (3), 6–8 (2), 4–5 (1), 3 (0). It assesses level of consciousness and is essential for identifying head injury severity. GCS is mandatory in every RTS assessment. **C. Respiratory rate** — Respiratory rate is the third mandatory component of RTS, coded as: 10–29 breaths/min (4), >29 breaths/min (3), 6–9 breaths/min (2), 1–5 breaths/min (1), apnea (0). It reflects ventilatory adequacy and is always part of RTS scoring. ## High-Yield Facts - **RTS components**: GCS, Systolic BP, and Respiratory Rate only—pulse rate is NOT included. - **RTS range**: 0–12; score ≥11 predicts <10% mortality, score ≤5 predicts >50% mortality. - **Pulse rate is excluded** because it is redundant with systolic BP in assessing cardiovascular status. - **RTS is used for triage** in Indian trauma centres (ATLS protocol) for rapid field and ED assessment. - **Each RTS parameter** is coded 0–4 based on severity thresholds; sum gives total score. ## Mnemonics **RTS = GSR (not GSRP)** **G**lasgow Coma Scale, **S**ystolic BP, **R**espiratory Rate. Pulse is NOT part of RTS—remember 'GSR' to exclude the P. **RTS ≠ All Vitals** RTS is selective: it takes GCS (neuro), SBP (perfusion), RR (ventilation) but skips pulse because SBP already covers cardiovascular status. Use this when NBE tries to trick you with 'which vital is in RTS?' ## NBE Trap NBE exploits the assumption that "all vital signs" are part of trauma scoring. Students who memorize vitals (HR, BP, RR, temp) without understanding RTS's specific three-parameter design often incorrectly include pulse rate. The trap is pairing pulse rate with other legitimate RTS components to create cognitive confusion. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian trauma centres, RTS is calculated within seconds of ED arrival to guide immediate triage decisions (red/yellow/green). A patient with GCS 8, SBP 70, RR 8 gets RTS 3 (high mortality risk) and goes straight to resuscitation—pulse rate measurement would delay this critical decision, which is why it was deliberately excluded from the score. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 29 (Trauma); ATLS Manual (American College of Surgeons); Harrison Ch. 271 (Shock and Resuscitation)_
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