Literature DB >> 24632581

Pediatric liver lacerations and intensive care: evaluation of ICU triage strategies.

Heather E Fremgen1, Susan L Bratton, Ryan R Metzger, Douglas C Barnhart.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare PICU admission criteria following blunt traumatic liver laceration based on CT grade and/or physiologic instability with actual practice to improve efficiency of ICU admission.
DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.
SETTING: Patients with grade 3-6 liver lacerations, 2002-2010. PATIENTS: Hundred seventy-one infants and children, ages 1 month to 17 years.
INTERVENTIONS: None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Preadmission signs of physiologic instability (i.e., coma and cardiac arrest), liver CT grading, and outcomes including length of stay and packed RBC transfusion after admission to ICU were collected. Multiple body region severe trauma was defined as more than or equal to 1 extra-abdominal body area abbreviated injury score more than or equal to 4. Actual ICU admissions were compared with predicted. Two patients died before ICU admission and five (3%) died afterward. Of 169 patients, 52 (31%) were initially admitted to the inpatient ward. Five percent received surgical care for liver injury. Twenty percent received packed RBCs emergently for shock, whereas 5% received their first packed RBCs after admission. Compared with ICU admissions, ward patients were significantly older, had lower Injury Severity Scores, and less operative care. Among ICU patients, transfusion for hemorrhagic shock was significantly associated with more severe injury scores. Sixty percent of ICU patients were not transfused. ICU triage determined by signs of physiologic instability predicted 53 admissions (31%) including seven of nine patients (78%) treated with transfusions after admission. Predicted ICU admission for nontransfused patients was lower-9%. Adding CT laceration grade more than or equal to 4 increased ICU admissions to 129 (76%). Among surviving ICU patients, 37 of 62 patients (60%) with isolated severe abdominal trauma and no systemic instability had ICU length of stay less than 1 day.
CONCLUSIONS: Children with isolated abdominal injury and no physiologic instability can generally be treated without ICU admission. Adding grade more than or equal to 4 to usual ICU admission criteria resulted in excessive admission of stable patients.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24632581     DOI: 10.1097/PCC.0000000000000102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatr Crit Care Med        ISSN: 1529-7535            Impact factor:   3.624


  3 in total

Review 1.  Follow-up strategies for patients with splenic trauma managed non-operatively: the 2022 World Society of Emergency Surgery consensus document.

Authors:  Mauro Podda; Belinda De Simone; Marco Ceresoli; Francesco Virdis; Francesco Favi; Johannes Wiik Larsen; Federico Coccolini; Massimo Sartelli; Nikolaos Pararas; Solomon Gurmu Beka; Luigi Bonavina; Raffaele Bova; Adolfo Pisanu; Fikri Abu-Zidan; Zsolt Balogh; Osvaldo Chiara; Imtiaz Wani; Philip Stahel; Salomone Di Saverio; Thomas Scalea; Kjetil Soreide; Boris Sakakushev; Francesco Amico; Costanza Martino; Andreas Hecker; Nicola de'Angelis; Mircea Chirica; Joseph Galante; Andrew Kirkpatrick; Emmanouil Pikoulis; Yoram Kluger; Denis Bensard; Luca Ansaloni; Gustavo Fraga; Ian Civil; Giovanni Domenico Tebala; Isidoro Di Carlo; Yunfeng Cui; Raul Coimbra; Vanni Agnoletti; Ibrahima Sall; Edward Tan; Edoardo Picetti; Andrey Litvin; Dimitrios Damaskos; Kenji Inaba; Jeffrey Leung; Ronald Maier; Walt Biffl; Ari Leppaniemi; Ernest Moore; Kurinchi Gurusamy; Fausto Catena
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2022-10-12       Impact factor: 8.165

2.  Characteristics and predictors of intensive care unit admission in pediatric blunt abdominal trauma.

Authors:  Steven C Mehl; Megan E Cunningham; Christian J Streck; Rowland Pettit; Eunice Y Huang; Matthew T Santore; Kuojen Tsao; Richard A Falcone; Melvin S Dassinger; Jeffrey H Haynes; Robert T Russell; Bindi J Naik-Mathuria; Shawn D St Peter; David Mooney; Jeffrey Upperman; Martin L Blakely; Adam M Vogel
Journal:  Pediatr Surg Int       Date:  2022-02-06       Impact factor: 2.003

3.  Correlating MDCT Liver Injury Grade and Clinical Outcome in Patients Without Significant Extra-hepatic Injury.

Authors:  Ravi Kumar; Atin Kumar; Vinit Baliyan; Shivanand Gamanagatti; Ashu Seith Bhalla; Raju Sharma; Amit Gupta; Subodh Kumar; M C Misra
Journal:  Indian J Surg       Date:  2015-09-28       Impact factor: 0.656

  3 in total

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