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Management of blunt abdominal trauma

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Rapid responder: surgical evaluation necessary initially ... Angiogram, bile duct complications. Perihepatic packing. Operative technique. Suturing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Management of blunt abdominal trauma


1
Management of blunt abdominal trauma
  • Subash Gupta
  • Gyan Burman Liver Surgery Unit
  • Sir Ganga Ram Hospital
  • New Delhi

2
Plan
  • ABC of resuscitation
  • ATLS
  • DPL/US /CT scan
  • Damage control surgery
  • Specific issues in surgical care

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Resuscitation
  • Circulation
  • Two large bore(16G)
  • 2 L Ringers lactate
  • Rapid responder surgical evaluation necessary
    initially
  • Transient response ongoing loss/inadequate
    resuscitation, rapid surgical intervention
  • Minimal or no response, immediate intervention
  • Pump failure, myocardial contusion/tamponade
  • Permissive hypotension,
  • Pop the clot
  • not with head injury

5
Permissive Hypotension for Trauma Resuscitation
Jon Hoerner, trauma.org (710) October
2002 Please mark my word. Within no less than 10
years, probably even less than 5 years, any one
that raises the blood pressure to higher than 3/4
the pre injury level, especially if using
crystalloid solutions will be severely criticized
as violating one of the indicators, whether the
injury be penetrating, blunt, elderly, child, or
one's own self or family. Also mark this down on
this date. The final target for a prehospital or
EC measured BP will be that greater than 80
SYSTOLIC will be the level that the QA moral
police will cite that those of you who believe in
two large bore IVs, Rapid infusors, interosseous
and sternal infursors, the 3 to 1 rule, and
cyclic hyper resuscitation as causing unnecessary
complications, deaths, and costs. Ken Mattox.
Trauma.Org Trauma-List, 30th August 2002
6
Abdominal trauma
  • Peritoneal cavity major occult loss
  • Assessment accurate diagnosis not important, but
    recognise that abdominal injury exists
  • Special diagnostic tests
  • Equivocal, unreliable, impractical
  • Diagnostic lavage/CT scan
  • FAST

7
Liver Trauma
  • Conservative paradigm shift
  • Before 1993, routine operative treatment
  • Between 1993 - 1994, selective non operative
    management
  • Between 1994 - 1998, non operative management
    standard practice

8
Conservative treatment
  • Avoids laparotomy and complications of laparotomy
  • Decreases blood transfusion
  • High success rate irrespective of CT extent of
    injury, extent of haemoperitoneum
  • No evidence to suggest missing of other injuries
  • Contrast blush or ongoing haemorrhage indication
    for embolization

9
Liver trauma (contd.)
  • Blunt
  • Gunshot/penetrating explore
  • Angiogram, bile duct complications
  • Perihepatic packing

10
Operative technique
  • Suturing
  • Liver suture
  • Resection
  • ?Mesh compression
  • Inflow occlusion

11
Operative technique
  • Exposure and haemostasis
  • Mobilisation
  • Direct pressure, electrocautery, argon beam
    coagulation, finger fracture with direct ligation
    of bleeders
  • Pringle manoeuvre,
  • Avoid deep liver sutures
  • Vascularised omental flap for tamponade

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Pancreas
  • Explore and drain
  • Distal pan/splenectomy
  • Recognise duodenal injury
  • Refer or call for help if needed
    pancreaticoduodenectomy
  • Whipples resection (SGRH, lt 5 mortality)

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Spleen
  • Conservation
  • Key is to be able mobilise spleen outside the
    incision
  • Delayed rupture ???
  • Splenic conservation data??

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Damage Control surgery
31
Damage control
  • Control haemorrhage and contamination
  • Resuscitation correct hypothermia, acidosis and
    coagulopathy
  • Return to OT definitive repair
  • Post operative care

32
Damage Control Surgery
  • Phase I
  • Rapid termination of operative procedure
  • Arrest of bleeding
  • Removal of contamination
  • Phase II
  • Correction of physiologic abnormalities
  • Acidosis, hypothermia, coagulopathy
  • Phase III
  • Definitive surgery

33
What is different?
  • Surgical dogma complete the operation
  • 1908 Pringle packing of liver injury
  • Fell out of favour, not used in Vietnam war
  • 1981 Feliciano 90 survival by packing in severe
    liver injury
  • 1983 Stone abbreviated laparotomy, 11/17
    survivors
  • Rotundo damage control surgery, 1990s

34
The lethal triad
  • Bleeding coagulopathy
  • Acidosis hypothermia

35
Hypothermia
  • Fluids needed for resuscitation
  • Exposure of body
  • Large incision and long duration of procedure
  • Blood loss, decreased O2 consumption and
    decreased heat production

36
Effects of hypothermia
  • 100 mortality if core temp lt 32C
  • Diminished cardiac function
  • Coagulopathy clotting cascade is a temp.
    dependent reaction, fibrinolysis, platelet
    dysfunction/sequestration

37
Acidosis
  • Lactate production from anaerobic metabolism
  • Failure to normalize lactate concentration by 48
    hours, mortality between 86 to 100
  • Systemic effects decreased contractility,
    impaired response to catecholamines and
    ventricular arrhythmias
  • Coagulopathy worsened

38
Coagulopathy
  • Dilution worsens coagulopathy
  • Dilution and hypothermia additive
  • Acidosis worsens coagulopathy

39
Damage control procedure
  • ABC
  • Life threatening bleeding rush to OR
  • Temp elevated, Warm ventilator circuit, Bair
    hugger, early replacement of coagulation factors
  • No effective guidelines when to initiate damage
    control

40
Abdomen
  • Liver packing
  • Ligation of blood vessels
  • Placement of intraluminal shunts
  • Chest tubes in to aorta or IVC
  • Inflatable balloon catheters

41
Abdomen II
  • Resect hollow viscus with stapler
  • Biliopancreatic injuries by closed suction
    drainage
  • Ligation of ureter or tube ureterostomy
  • Formal closure
  • Abdominal compartment syndrome
  • ARDS
  • MOF
  • Closure of skin, mesh

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Stage II, resuscitation
  • Similar principles as in OR
  • ? Continuous arteriovenous rewarming
  • Reduces time to normothermia
  • Resuscitation requirements
  • Early mortality
  • Correction of acidosis Hyperchloremic acidosis
    versus lactic acidosis, anion gap narrow versus
    widened
  • Correction of coagulopathy

46
Definitive operation
  • Attempt to return to OR within 72 hours
  • Remove packs
  • Complete exploration
  • Haemostasis
  • Small bowel continuity
  • Large bowel exteriorization

47
Abdominal compartment syndrome
  • End organ dysfunction secondary to intraabdominal
    hypertension
  • Tense abdomen,
  • Elevated peak airway pressure
  • Inadequate ventilation
  • Inadequate oxygenation
  • Oliguria
  • Reversed with decompression
  • Bladder pressure gt16mmHg
  • Full blown syndrome gt35 mmHg
  • Worse with fascial closure

48
Control of bleeding
  • Bleeding DU, assistant to compress aorta against
    spine while taking stitches
  • Leaking aneurysm mobilise left lobe, loop
    oesophagus divide crus of diaphragm and control
    supracoeliac aorta
  • Ligation of internal iliac vessels if there is
    retroperitoneal bleeding, pelvic trauma

49
Summary
  • Important to recognise when to stop operating
    stop the bleeding and deal with contamination
  • Discretion is better part of valour
  • Surgery should not be delayed till patient is
    adequately resuscitated, this can happen
    concurrently in OR.

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