Literature DB >> 22166313

Penetrating abdomino-thoracic injuries: report of four impressive, spectacular and representative cases as well as their challenging surgical management.

Frank Eder1, Frank Meyer, Christof Huth, Zuhir Halloul, Hans Lippert.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Gunshot wounds are rare events in European countries, but stab and impalement injuries occur more frequently and are often spectacular. The aim of the study was to describe several types of penetrating abdomino-thoracic injuries as well as the appropriate surgical interventions, including complex wound management.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: The representative case series includes four patients with abdomino-thoracic penetrating trauma (two impalements and two stabbings), who were treated in a surgical university hospital (tertiary) centre during a 12-month period.
RESULTS: 1. A man was impaled on a steel pipe, which entered the body above the right kidney and behind the liver through the mediastinum via the right thorax, passing the heart and aortic arch up to the left clavicle. The rod was removed via sternotomy and median laparotomy. Only the left subclavian vein required repair. Postoperatively, a residual lesion of the left brachial plexus caused temporary pneumonia. 2. A leg of a collapsing chair drilled into a woman's left foramen obturatorium and exited the body at the right anterior iliac spine. At a regional hospital, the chair leg was removed and the canal caused by gluteal penetration was excised. Exploratory laparotomy revealed peritonitis resulting from a perforated ileum. The injury was repaired with segmental resection and anastomosis. Postoperative right inguinal wound necrosis necessitated excision and vacuum-assisted closure sealing. The patient has residual paresthesia in her left leg resulting from a sacral plexus lesion. 3. During an altercation, a man was stabbed twice in the right thorax. The right pulmonary lobe, the diaphragm, and the liver dome between segment VIII and V were injured. The patient also had a large scalp avulsion at the left and right parietooccipital site and transection of the biceps muscle at the middle third of the right humerus. The chest injuries, approached via right subcostal incision and right anterior thoracotomy were managed with liver packing (two towels, removed after 2 days), suture of the diaphragm, and pleural drainage. 4. A man was stabbed in the left thorax, resulting in pneumothorax and lesions of the diaphragm and left third of the transversal colon, and the neck, resulting in lesions of the pharynx and internal jugular vein. These injuries were approached with left thoracic drainage and suture of the colon and diaphragm lesions. Subsequent right thoracotomy was required to treat right pleural empyema caused by bronchopneumonia as a consequence of blunt thoracic trauma. In addition, the patient required relaparotomy to drain an abscess within the Douglas space and Billroth II gastric resection to control recurrent Forrest-Ia bleeding.
CONCLUSIONS: Penetrating abdomino-thoracic injuries demand immediate life-saving measures, transfer to a trauma centre, appropriate resuscitative care, prompt diagnosis, and surgical intervention by an interdisciplinary team of abdominal, vascular, and cardiac surgeons. If these measures are provided, outcomes are maximized, mortality is minimized, and permanent damage can be avoided.

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Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 22166313     DOI: 10.2478/v10035-011-0019-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pol Przegl Chir        ISSN: 0032-373X


  6 in total

1.  An Unusual Case of Transorificial Abdomino-Thoracic Impalement Injury in a Child.

Authors:  Hemanshi Shah; Charu Tiwari; Shalika Jayaswal; Keshav Murthy
Journal:  Bull Emerg Trauma       Date:  2016-10

Review 2.  Management of severe thoracic impalement trauma against two-wheeled horse carriage: a case report and literature review.

Authors:  R M Ruano; B M Pereira; G Biazzoto; J B Bortoto; G P Fraga
Journal:  Indian J Surg       Date:  2013-03-14       Impact factor: 0.656

3.  Successful management of impaled ice-pick stab injury of the suprarenal aorta - lessons learnt.

Authors:  Sivaraman Kumarasamy; Satish Subbiah Nagaraj; Manish Kumar; Ajay Savlania; Lileswar Kaman
Journal:  Trauma Case Rep       Date:  2022-05-24

4.  Penetrating abdomino-thoracic injury with an iron rod: An anaesthetic challenge.

Authors:  Kiranpreet Kaur; Suresh K Singhal; Mamta Bhardwaj; Prashant Kumar
Journal:  Indian J Anaesth       Date:  2014 Nov-Dec

5.  Thoraco- abdominal impalement injury: a case report.

Authors:  Gyanendra Malla; Bibhusan Basnet; Rais Vohra; Casey Herrforth; Shailesh Adhikari; Amit Bhandari
Journal:  BMC Emerg Med       Date:  2014-03-04

6.  Evaluation of percutaneous microwave coagulation therapy for hepatic artery injury.

Authors:  Yuanyuan Sun; Guoming Zhang; Jie Yu; Lei Dong; Wei Liu; Ping Liang
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2015-10-21
  6 in total

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