1.Diagnosis and treatment of 42 cases of multiple injuries with pancreatic injury.
C, MBA MBA ; Xiangjun, BAI ; Zhanfei, LI ; Zhaohui, TANG ; Wenxuan, WANG ; Zhen, YANG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2008;28(1):84-6
In order to summarize the clinical diagnosis and treatment methods for 42 cases of multiple injuries with pancreatic injury, a retrospective analysis on 42 cases of multiple injuries with pancreatic injury from January 1990 to January 2006 was carried out in our hospital. Most cases were associated with hemopneumothorax and rib fractures (52.3%), shock (50%), multiple fractures (47.6%), and severe brain injury (26.1%). In 42 cases, one case died of severe hemorrhagic shock, and the remaining 41 cases (97.6%) were cured (including 40 cases receiving surgical operation and one case receiving the conservative treatment). Postoperative complications occurred in 16 cases (21 cases/times): pancreatic fistula (5 cases/times) and incisional wound infection (5 cases/times), intra-abdominal infection (3 cases/times), stress ulcer (3 cases/times), pleural effusion (3 cases/times), pulmonary infection (one case) and wound dehiscence (1 case). The principle therapy of multiple injuries with pancreatic injury is to rescue life, followed by active treatment to prevent injuries which giving rise to the abnormal respiratory and circulatory functions, management of cerebral hernia and other injuries which endangers life at last, and the pancreatic injury to increase the survival rate and survival quality.
Abdominal Injuries/*diagnosis
;
Abdominal Injuries/*therapy
;
Accidents, Traffic
;
Emergency Medicine/methods
;
Multiple Trauma
;
Pancreas/*injuries
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Wound Healing
;
Wounds, Nonpenetrating/diagnosis
;
Wounds, Nonpenetrating/therapy
3.Role of contrast-enhanced ultrasound in management of splenic trauma.
Jie TANG ; Hui-Qin ZHANG ; Fa-Qin LÜ ; Wen-Xiu LI ; Yu-Kun LUO ; Tan-Shi LI
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2008;30(1):27-30
OBJECTIVETo study the role of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in the management of splenic trauma
METHODSForty patients with splenic trauma underwent CEUS examination and then different management were provided according to the examination results and the general status of patients: conservative treatment (group I, n = 19); CEUS-guided injective therapy (group II, n = 6); and surgery (group III, n = 15).
RESULTSEighteen patients were cured in group I and one patient experienced rehaemorrhagia. The haemostatic effect of CEUS-guided injective therapy was obvious in all six patients in group II. Among them, one patient experienced arteriovenous fistula, which was resolved after one week of injective therapy. Fifteen patients in Group III underwent surgery and were cured.
CONCLUSIONCEUS can provide reliable information for therapy mode selection in patients with splenic trauma and can be used to guide injective therapy.
Contrast Media ; Humans ; Spleen ; diagnostic imaging ; injuries ; Ultrasonography ; Wounds, Nonpenetrating ; diagnostic imaging ; therapy
4.Analysis of diagnosis and treatment for blunt trauma in the neck.
Peng HUANG ; Shujun ZHANG ; Zhaohui LI ; Shanfang SONG ; Xuesong CHEN ; Hongtian WANG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2013;27(3):131-133
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the organ damage character and complications of blunt trauma in the neck, and the advantage and disadvantage of CT and ultrasound for blunt trauma in the neck.
METHOD:
The data of 7 neck blunt trauma cases was analyzed. Cricoarytenoid joint reduction, tracheotomy, exploratory surgery of neck were performed respectively for these cases.
RESULT:
Of the 2 cases with vocal cord paralysis, one had his vocal cords fixed in the the para-median position. one had his vocal cords move freely. 2 cases of epiglottis edema had been cured. Among the 2 cases of thyroid area swelling and congestion, one died from respiratory failure, one was cured. One case died of carotid artery embolism.
CONCLUSION
Circulation of the head should be noticed as well as keeping respiratory tract clear and anti-shock treatment. Some patient with negative laryngeal examinations might get worse in the following hours, and swelling of the neck, dyspnea, obnubilation may appear in these cases. Dynamic monitoring could be helpful for the diagnosis and treatment of neck blunt trauma.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Neck Injuries
;
complications
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Wounds, Nonpenetrating
;
complications
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
;
Young Adult
5.Blunt trauma related chest wall and pulmonary injuries: An overview.
Bekir Nihat DOGRUL ; Ibrahim KILICCALAN ; Ekrem Samet ASCI ; Selim Can PEKER
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2020;23(3):125-138
Physical traumas are tragic and multifaceted injuries that suddenly threaten life. Although it is the third most common cause of death in all age groups, one out of four trauma patients die due to thoracic injury or its complications. Blunt injuries constitute the majority of chest trauma. This indicates the importance of chest trauma among all traumas. Blunt chest trauma is usually caused by motor vehicle accident, falling from height, blunt instrument injury and physical assault. As a result of chest trauma, many injuries may occur, such as pulmonary injuries, and these require urgent intervention. Chest wall and pulmonary injuries range from rib fractures to flail chest, pneumothorax to hemothorax and pulmonary contusion to tracheobronchial injuries. Following these injuries, patients may present with a simple dyspnea or even respiratory arrest. For such patient, it is important to understand the treatment logic and to take a multidisciplinary approach to treat the pulmonary and chest wall injuries. This is because only 10% of thoracic trauma patients require surgical operation and the remaining 90% can be treated with simple methods such as appropriate airway, oxygen support, maneuvers, volume support and tube thoracostomy. Adequate pain control in chest trauma is sometimes the most basic and best treatment. With definite diagnosis, the morbidity and mortality can be significantly reduced by simple treatment methods.
Flail Chest
;
therapy
;
Hemothorax
;
therapy
;
Humans
;
Lung Injury
;
therapy
;
Pain Management
;
Pneumothorax
;
therapy
;
Rib Fractures
;
therapy
;
Thoracic Injuries
;
therapy
;
Thoracic Wall
;
injuries
;
Wounds, Nonpenetrating
;
therapy
6.Non-operative management for abdominal solidorgan injuries: A literature review.
Amonpon KANLERD ; Karikarn AUKSORNCHART ; Piyapong BOONYASATID
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2022;25(5):249-256
The philosophy of abdominal injury management is currently changing from mandatory exploration to selective non-operative management (NOM). The patient with hemodynamic stability and absence of peritonitis should be managed non-operatively. NOM has an overall success rate of 80%-90%. It also can reduce the rate of non-therapeutic abdominal exploration, preserve organ function, and has been defined as the safest choice in experienced centers. However, NOM carries a risk of missed injury such as hollow organ injury, diaphragm injury, and delayed hemorrhage. Adjunct therapies such as angiography with embolization, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with stenting, and percutaneous drainage could increase the chances of successful NOM. This article aims to describe the evolution of NOM and define its place in specific abdominal solid organ injury for the practitioner who faces this problem.
Abdominal Injuries/surgery*
;
Angiography
;
Humans
;
Injury Severity Score
;
Laparotomy
;
Probability
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Spleen/injuries*
;
Wounds, Nonpenetrating/therapy*
7.Non-operative management of adult blunt splenic injuries.
Jun YANG ; Jin-mou GAO ; Baste JEAN-CLAUDE
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2006;9(4):246-248
OBJECTIVETo investigate the indication of non-operative management of adult blunt splenic injuries.
METHODSA retrospective review was performed on all adult patients (age>15 years) with blunt splenic injuries admitted to the department of vascular surgery of Pellegrin hospital in France from 1999 to 2003. We managed splenic injuries non-operatively in all appropriate patients without regard to age.
RESULTSDuring the 4 years, 54 consecutive adult patients with blunt splenic injuries were treated in the hospital. A total of 27 patients with stable hemodynamic status were treated non-operatively at first, of which 2 patients were failed to non-operative treatment. The successful percentage of non-operative management was 92.6%. In the 54 patients, 7 of 8 patients older than 55 years were treated with non-operative management. Two cases developing postoperatively subphrenic infection were healed by proper treatment. In the series, there was no death.
CONCLUSIONSNon-operative management of low-grade splenic injuries can be accomplished with an acceptable low-failure rate. If the clinical and laboratory parameters difficult for surgeons to make decisions, they can depend on Resciniti's CT (computed tomography) scoring system to select a subset of adults with splenic trauma who are excellent candidates for a trial of non-operative management. The patients older than 55 years are not absolutely inhibited to receive non-operative management.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Female ; Hematocrit ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Multiple Trauma ; therapy ; Retrospective Studies ; Spleen ; injuries ; surgery ; Wounds, Nonpenetrating ; surgery ; therapy
8.Nonoperative management of blunt splenic injury.
Ning YE ; Tao ZHAO ; Hua-dong LU ; Rong-ge CAO ; Bin CAO ; Yong YE
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2009;47(2):86-88
OBJECTIVETo investigate the monitoring and therapeutic methods of nonoperative management of blunt splenic injury.
METHODSEighty-two cases with nonoperative management of 95 patients of blunt splenic injury from September 2005 to April 2008 were analyzed retrospectively. Percutaneous peritoneal drainage was applied to 75 cases, and auto-blood transfusion was applied to 38 cases. Eighty-two cases were followed up from 3 weeks to 8 months.
RESULTSEighty-two patients with nonoperative management were treated successfully, including 34 cases classified as grade III to IV, 6 cases over 55-years-old, 14 cases with severe multiple injury (ISS > or = 16) and 37 cases whose drained peritoneal blood volume were over 500 ml. The drained peritoneal blood volume was 30 to 2400 ml. The total volume of auto-blood transfusion was 22 300 ml and the average volume was 613 ml. All cases were followed up without delayed hematocele or peritoneal infection.
CONCLUSIONSMost hemodynamically stable patients with blunt splenic injury can be healed with nonoperative management. The treatments including percutaneous peritoneal drainage and transfusion of auto-blood can significantly increase the performance rate and the achievement ratio of nonoperative management of blunt splenic injury.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Child ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Retrospective Studies ; Spleen ; injuries ; Wounds, Nonpenetrating ; therapy ; Young Adult
9.Effect of Xuefu Zhuyu decoction in preventing complications of rib fracture in patients with blunt chest injury.
Tao ZHU ; Zong-De HU ; Jing-Yin MAI
Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine 2010;30(9):905-907
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the clinical effect of Xuefu Zhuyu Decoction (XFZYD) on the incidence of complications of rib fracture in patients with blunt chest injury.
METHODSOne hundred and twenty patients with rib fracture stratified according to the AIS scale in three layers (1-3) were equally assigned to two groups, the treated group and the control group, all received conventional treatment, but XFZYD was administered to patients in the treated group additionally. The incidence of complications in patients, including atelectasis, pleural effusion, pulmonary contusion, pleurocentesis and closed thoracic drainage, were observed.
RESULTSThe incidence of pleural effusion in patients of AIS-1 and -2 in the treated group was 20% and 45% respectively, which was remarkable lower than that in the control group (55% and 85%) respectively (P < 0.05); in the treated group, 10% patients of AIS-3, for whom close thoracic drainage was applied, while in the control group, the percentage reached 60%, showing significant difference between groups (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONXFZYD could reduce the incidence of pleural effusion in patients with blunt chest injured rib fracture of AIS-1 or -2, and reduce the utilization of close thoracic drainage in those of AIS-3, so it is good for clinical practice.
Adult ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; therapeutic use ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Phytotherapy ; Pleural Effusion ; etiology ; prevention & control ; Rib Fractures ; complications ; drug therapy ; Thoracic Injuries ; complications ; Wounds, Nonpenetrating ; complications
10.Evaluating the effect of montelukast tablets on respiratory complications in patients following blunt chest wall trauma: A double-blind, randomized clinical trial.
Soleyman HEYDARI ; Hadi KHOSHMOHABAT ; Ali Taheri AKERDI ; Fathollah AHMADPOUR ; Shahram PAYDAR
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2023;26(2):116-120
PURPOSE:
Patients with multiple traumas are at high risk of developing respiratory complications, including pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Many pulmonary complications are associated with systemic inflammation and pulmonary neutrophilic infiltration. Leukotriene-receptor antagonists are anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant drugs subsiding airway inflammation. The present study investigates the effectiveness of montelukast in reducing pulmonary complications among trauma patients.
METHODS:
This randomized, double-blind, placebo-control trial was conducted in patients with multiple blunt traumas and evidence of lung contusion detected via CT scan. We excluded patients if they met at least one of the following conditions: < 16 years old, history of cardiopulmonary diseases or positive history of montelukast-induced hypersensitivity reactions. Patients were allocated to the treatment (10 mg of montelukast) or placebo group using permuted block randomization method. The primary measured outcome was the volume of pulmonary contusion at the end of the trial. The secondary outcomes were intensive care unit and hospital length of stay, ventilation days, multi-organ failure, and the in-hospital mortality rate.
RESULTS:
In total, 65 eligible patients (treatment = 31, placebo = 34) were included for the final analysis. The treatment group had more pulmonary contusion volume (mean (SD), mm3) at the right (68726.97 (93656.54) vs. 59730.27 (76551.74)) and the left side (67501.71 (91514.04) vs. 46502.21 (80604.21)), higher initial C-reactive peptide level (12.16 (10.58) vs. 10.85 (17.87)) compared to the placebo group, but the differences were not statistically significant (p > 0.05). At the end of the study, the mean (SD) of pulmonary contusion volume (mm3) (right side = 116748.74 (361705.12), left side = 64522.03 (117266.17)) of the treatment group were comparable to that of the placebo group (right side = 40051.26 (64081.56), left side = 25929.12 (47417.13), p = 0.228 and 0.082, respectively). Moreover, both groups have statistically similar hospital (mean (SD), days) (10.87 (9.83) vs. 13.05 (10.12)) and intensive care unit length of stays (mean (SD), days) (7.16 (8.15) vs. 7.82 (7.48)). Of note, the frequency of the in-hospital complications (treatment vs. control group) including acute respiratory distress syndrome (12.9% vs. 8.8%, p = 0.71), pneumonia (19.4% vs. 17.6%, p = 0.85), multi-organ failure (12.9% vs. 17.6%, p = 0.58) and the mortality rate (22.6% vs. 14.7%, p = 0.41) were comparable between the groups.
CONCLUSION
Administrating montelukast has no preventive or therapeutic effects on lung contusion or its complications.
Humans
;
Adolescent
;
Thoracic Wall
;
Pneumonia
;
Wounds, Nonpenetrating
;
Thoracic Injuries/drug therapy*
;
Lung Injury
;
Contusions
;
Respiratory Distress Syndrome/etiology*
;
Inflammation
;
Tablets
;
Treatment Outcome