scholarly journals Damage control in abdominal vascular trauma

2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. e4064808
Author(s):  
Alberto Garcia ◽  
Mauricio Millan ◽  
Daniela Burbano ◽  
Carlos Alberto Ordoñez ◽  
Michael W Parra ◽  
...  

Abdominal vascular trauma occurs in a small proportion of patients admitted in trauma centers. However, up to a quarter or a third of the patients who require a laparotomy will have a vascular injury. Preoperative identification is impossible in most cases, therefore, surgeons must be prepared for its early intraoperative recognition to allow appropriate management. This include temporary bleeding control techniques, identification of the probable injured vessel and the specific approach and management. Often, recognition of exsanguinating intra-abdominal hemorrhage will lead to immediate surgical indication, with activation of damage control protocols and consideration of early aortic occlusion.This paper illustrates the applications of damage control in the management of patients with abdominal vascular trauma.

2014 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 710-724 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adenauer Marinho de Oliveira Góes Junior ◽  
Simone de Campos Vieira Abib ◽  
Maria Teresa de Seixas Alves ◽  
Paulo Sérgio Venerando da Silva Ferreira ◽  
Mariseth Carvalho de Andrade

2021 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. e4114735
Author(s):  
Mario Alain Herrera ◽  
Mauricio Millan ◽  
Ana Milena Del Valle ◽  
Mateo Betancourt-Cajiao ◽  
Yaset Caicedo ◽  
...  

Peripheral vascular injuries are uncommon in civilian trauma but can threaten the patient’s life or the viability of the limb. The definitive control of the vascular injury represents a surgical challenge, especially if the patient is hemodynamically unstable. This article proposes the management of peripheral vascular trauma following damage control surgery principles. It is essential to rapidly identify vascular injury signs and perform temporary bleeding control maneuvers. The surgical approaches according to the anatomical injured region should be selected. We propose two novel approaches to access the axillary and popliteal zones. The priority should be to reestablish limb perfusion via primary repair or damage control techniques (vascular shunt or endovascular approach). Major vascular surgeries should be managed postoperatively in the intensive care unit, which will allow correction of physiological derangement and identification of those developing compartmental syndrome. All permanent or temporary vascular procedures should be followed by a definitive repair within the first 8 hours. An early diagnosis and opportune intervention are fundamental to preserve the function and perfusion of the extremity.


VASA ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheong J. Lee ◽  
Rory Loo ◽  
Max V. Wohlauer ◽  
Parag J. Patel

Abstract. Although management paradigms for certain arterial trauma, such as aortic injuries, have moved towards an endovascular approach, the application of endovascular techniques for the treatment of peripheral arterial injuries continues to be debated. In the realm of peripheral vascular trauma, popliteal arterial injuries remain a devastating condition with significant rates of limb loss. Expedient management is essential and surgical revascularization has been the gold standard. Initial clinical assessment of vascular injury is aided by readily available imaging techniques such as duplex ultrasonography and high resolution computed tomographic angiography. Conventional catheter based angiography, however, remain the gold standard in the determination of vascular injury. There are limited data examining the outcomes of endovascular techniques to address popliteal arterial injuries. In this review, we examine the imaging modalities and current approaches and data regarding endovascular techniques for the management popliteal arterial trauma.


Author(s):  
Michel Paul Johan Teuben ◽  
Carsten Mand ◽  
Laura Moosdorf ◽  
Kai Sprengel ◽  
Alba Shehu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Simultaneous trauma admissions expose medical professionals to increased workload. The impact of simultaneous trauma admissions on hospital allocation, therapy, and outcome is currently unclear. We hypothesized that multiple admission-scenarios impact the diagnostic pathway and outcome. Methods The TraumaRegister DGU® was utilized. Patients admitted between 2002–2015 with an ISS ≥ 9, treated with ATLS®- algorithms were included. Group ´IND´ included individual admissions, two individuals that were admitted within 60 min of each other were selected for group ´MULT´. Patients admitted within 10 min were considered as simultaneous (´SIM´) admissions. We compared patient and trauma characteristics, treatment, and outcomes between both groups. Results 132,382 admissions were included, and 4,462/3.4% MULTiple admissions were found. The SIM-group contained 1,686/1.3% patients. The overall median injury severity score was 17 and a mean age of 48 years was found. MULT patients were more frequently admitted to level-one trauma centers (68%) than individual trauma admissions were (58%, p < 0.001). Mean time to CT-scanning (24 vs. 26/28 min) was longer in MULT / SIM patients compared to individual admissions. No differences in utilization of damage control principles were seen. Moreover, mortality rates did not differ between the groups (13.1% in regular admissions and 11.4%/10,6% in MULT/SIM patients). Conclusion This study demonstrates that simultaneous treatment of injured patients is rare. Individuals treated in parallel with other patients were more often admitted to level-one trauma centers compared with individual patients. Although diagnostics take longer, treatment principles and mortality are equal in individual admissions and simultaneously admitted patients. More studies are required to optimize health care under these conditions.


2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 725-733 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten Michael Bünger ◽  
Niels Grabow ◽  
Katrin Sternberg ◽  
Martin Goosmann ◽  
Klaus-Peter Schmitz ◽  
...  

Purpose: To assess the technical feasibility and biocompatibility of a novel stent based on poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) and poly(4-hydroxybutyrate) (P4HB) for peripheral vascular applications. Methods: A polytetrafluoroethylene aortobi-iliac graft was implanted in 5 pigs through a midline abdominal incision. After transverse graft limb incision, 5 PLLA/P4HB stents and 5 metal stents (316L stainless steel) were randomly deployed at both iliac anastomotic sites with 6-mm balloon catheters. Angiography was performed to determine patency prior to sacrifice at 6 weeks. Stented segments were surgically explanted and processed for quantitative histomorphometry. Vascular injury and inflammation scores were assigned to the stented iliac segments. Results: No animals were lost during follow-up. All PLLA/P4HB stents were deployed within 2 minutes by balloon inflation to 8 bars without rupture of the stent struts or anastomotic suture. All stents were patent on postprocedural angiography. Histological analysis showed no signs of excessive recoiling or collapse. PLLA/P4HB stents demonstrated decreased residual lumen area and increased neointimal area after 6 weeks (12.27±0.62 and 8.40±1.03 mm2, respectively) compared to 316L stents (13.54±0.84 and 6.90±1.11 mm2, respectively) as the result of differences in stent areas (PLLA/P4HB: 4.31±0.15 mm2; 316L: 2.73±0.29 mm2). Vascular injury scores showed only mild vascular trauma for all stents (PLLA/P4HB: 0.41±0.59; 316L: 0.32±0.47). Inflammatory reaction was slightly higher around PLLA/P4HB stent struts (1.39±0.52) compared to 316L (1.09±0.50). Conclusion: Rapid balloon expansion of PLLA/P4HB stents is feasible without risk of strut rupture. PLLA/P4HB stents provide adequate mechanical stability after iliac anastomotic stenting in pigs. Smaller residual luminal areas in the PLLA/P4HB stents might have been caused by tissue ingrowth into the larger strut interspaces due to higher strut thickness (stent area) in this group. This limitation needs to be addressed in future work on the stent design.


2018 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
pp. 258-262
Author(s):  
Ahsin Manzoor Bhatti ◽  
Junaid Mansoor ◽  
Haroon Sabir Khan

Objective: To analyze errors in primary treatment of vascular injuries and delayed presentations of missed vascular injuries as a surrogate indicator of need for improved vascular surgical training of upcoming general surgeons. Materials and methods: This retrospective observational study was carried out at vascular surgery department of two tertiary care hospitals of Armed Forces from Jan 2012 to June 2017. Hospital records of all patients with vascular trauma were analyzed for presence of pitfalls in primary treatment and delayed presentation of missed vascular injuries which resulted in redo surgeries or adverse outcomes. Results: Out of 256 patients with vascular injury sequel 41 had either a problem in primary treatment or presented with delayed complications of missed injuries. The omissions can be divided into: missed injuries (24/41), technical errors in initial repair (12/24), reperfusion of mangled Extremity (3/41) and non availability of a surgeon capable of undertaking vascular repair. The commonest operative fault was failure to debride the vessel adequately and vascular repair under tension. The commonest primary assessment problem was failure to timely appreciate hard signs of vascular injury. Conclusion: With better training and emphasizing the need of thorough clinical examination outcome of vascular trauma can be improved.


Stroke ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Miklos G Marosfoi ◽  
Netanel Korin ◽  
Matthew J Gounis ◽  
Oktay Uzun ◽  
Srinivasan Vedantham ◽  
...  

Introduction: Despite the high effectiveness of stent-retrievers in ELVO, half of the patients remained functionally dependent (mRS≥3) after 90-days. Beyond futile recanalizations, variable endoluminal damage caused by stent-retrievers may contribute to reperfusion injury, and recruit iniflammatory cell infiltration. The goal of this study was to assess a less traumatic endovascular approach in combination with a novel shear activated-nanotherapeutic (SA-NT) that releases r-tPA when exposed to high levels of hemodynamic stress. Hypothesis: SA-NT treatment coupled with temporary endovascular bypass provides high recanalization rates while reducing vascular injury. Methods: a rabbit carotid vessel occlusion model was used. We evaluated angiographic recanalization with stent-bypass alone, intra-arterial delivery of soluble r-tPA alone, or stent-bypass combined with two doses (2 and 20 mg r-tPA) of intra-arterial infusion of either the SA-NT or soluble r-tPA. Vascular injury was compared against stent-retriever thrombectomy by assessing the level of damage on histology. Results: Shear-targeted delivery of r-tPA using the SA-NT resulted in the highest rate of complete recanalization when compared to controls (p=0.0011). SA-NT (20mg) had a higher likelihood of obtaining complete recanalization (mTICI:3) as compared to stent-bypass alone (OR: 65.019,95%CI:[1.77,>1000], p=0.0231), intra-arterial r-tPA alone (OR: 65.019, 95% CI [1.77,>1000], p=0.0231), or stent-bypass with soluble r-tPA (2 mg) (OR: 18.78, 95%CI [1.28,275.05], p=0.0322) (Figure). Histologically, there was significantly less vascular injury using a stent-bypass as compared to stent-retriever procedure (OR 12.97, 95%CI [8.01,21.02], p<0.0001). Conclusion: Nanoparticle-based thrombolytic therapy combined with stent-bypass achieves high rates of complete (mTICI:3) recanalization. This technology reduces vascular trauma as compared to stent-retriever thrombectomy


2021 ◽  
pp. 000313482110545
Author(s):  
Katherine Kelley ◽  
James Martinson ◽  
Sharon Henry ◽  
Thomas Scalea ◽  
Habeeba Park

Introduction The Stop the Bleed course was initiated in response to the Hartford Consensus and over 1 million people have been taught basic bleeding control techniques. Our study sought to determine the extent to which this training has been utilized. Methods Surveys were sent by email to students that had taken the Stop the Bleed course through our institution in 2017 or 2018. Data were collected utilizing the REDCap system and statistical calculations were performed. Results 2505 surveys were sent with 445 (18%) responses. The mean age of respondents was 48 years of age, 343 (77%) were female, and 230 (52%) were in the medical field. There were 17 respondents (3.8%) that stated they had utilized the techniques taught in the course; 16 out of 17 put pressure on a wound, 7 packed a wound, and 6 used a tourniquet. Patients had been injured by a variety of mechanisms including gunshot wound, stabbing, accidental laceration, and motor vehicle collision. Patients had good outcomes with 3 out of 17 surviving to emergency medical services arrival without known final outcome and the remaining 14 were known to do well. Conclusion The Stop the Bleed course is important to enable bystanders to provide hemorrhage control. Our study shows that the techniques have been utilized with 17 treated patients having a good outcome and while a utilization rate of 3.8% may appear low, it is similar to the utilization rate of cardiopulmonary resuscitation instruction of 2%.


2010 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. 76-82
Author(s):  
S W F Middleton ◽  
D M Nott ◽  
M J Midwinter ◽  
A W Lambert

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