Title of article
Determinants of Successful Non-Operative Management of Intra- Peritoneal Bleeding Following Blunt Abdominal Trauma
Author/Authors
Heidar، Ammar نويسنده Trauma Research Center, Department of Surgery, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran , , Ravanfar، Parsa نويسنده Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Nemazee Hospital, Shiraz, Iran , , Namazi، Golnaz نويسنده Trauma Research Center, Department of Surgery, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran , , Nikseresht، Taha نويسنده Trauma Research Center, Department of Surgery, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran , , Niakan، Mohammad Hadi نويسنده Trauma Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی 0 سال 2014
Pages
5
From page
125
To page
129
Abstract
Objectives: To identify the predictive factors of successful non-operative management of patients with intraperitoneal bleeding following blunt abdominal trauma.
Methods: This was cross-sectional study being performed in our Level I trauma center in southern Iran between 2010 and 2011. We included adult ( > 14 years) patients with blunt abdominal trauma and intra-
peritoneal hemorrhage detected by CT-Scan who were hemodynamically stable and did not require any surgical intervention. Patients were managed conservatively in ICU. Those who required laparotomy during the study period were named as non-operative management failure (NOM-F) while the other were non- operative management success (NOM-S). The baseline, clinical and laboratory characteristics were compared between two study groups in order to detect the predictors of successful NOM of intra-peritoneal bleeding. Results: Overall we included 80 eligible patients among whom there were 55 (68.7%) men and 25 (31.3%) women with mean age of 30.63.6± years. Finally, 43 (53.8%) were successfully managed conservatively (NOM-S) while 37 (46.2%) required laparotomy (NOM-F). We found that those who underwent emergency laparotomy had significantly higher ?Hb (p=0.016) and lower base deficit (p=0.005) when compared to those who were successfully managed conservatively. Those who required surgical intervention had significantly lower baseline systolic blood pressure (p < 0.001) and higher shock index (p=0.002). The other parameters such as pulse rate and respiratory rate were comparable between two study groups.
Conclusion: In patients with intra-peritoneal bleeding following blunt abdominal trauma, the most reliable predictive clinical and para-clinical factor of successful non-operative management are shock index and
systolic blood pressure on arrival, base deficit and hemoglobin drop within first 12 hours of admission.
Journal title
Bulletin of Emergency and Trauma
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Bulletin of Emergency and Trauma
Record number
1339046
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