| Literature DB >> 24902929 |
Kiyoshi Chiba1, Hiroyuki Abe, Yosuke Kitanaka, Takeshi Miyairi, Haruo Makuuchi.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Traumatic rupture of the thoracic aorta is a life-threatening injury requiring urgent surgical intervention. Despite recent improvements in resuscitation and emergency operative techniques, the outcomes of patients with multiple injuries are still associated with a high mortality rate. We retrospectively examined the preoperative demographic data, associated complications and mortality rate of these patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24902929 PMCID: PMC4254169 DOI: 10.1007/s11748-014-0422-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg ISSN: 1863-6705
Pre- and postoperative clinical data of patients
| No | Sex | Age | RTS | ISS | Body area of AIS > 3 | Procedure | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | F | 56 | 5.24 | 50 | Head (3), chest (5), extremity (4) | Direct closure → TAE | Alive |
| 2 | M | 25 | 5.24 | 35 | Chest (5), extremity (3) | Grafting | Alive |
| 3 | M | 47 | 5.97 | 50 | Chest (5), abdominal (3), extremity (4) | TAE → direct closure | Alive |
| 4 | M | 63 | 7.11 | 35 | Chest (5), extremity (3) | Direct closure | Alive |
| 5 | M | 25 | 4.94 | 50 | Head (3), chest (5) extremity (4) | TAE → direct closure | Alive |
| 6 | M | 22 | 3.57 | 43 | Head (3), chest (5) abdominal (3) | Grafting + small bowl resection | Alive |
| 7 | M | 39 | 7.84 | 26 | Chest (5) | Grafting | Alive |
| 8 | M | 45 | 3.07 | 50 | Head (3), chest (5) extremity (4) | TAE → Grafting pelvic external fixation | Alive |
| 9 | M | 18 | 7.84 | 43 | Chest (5), abdominal (3), extremity (3) | Grafting | Alive |
| 10 | M | 38 | 7.11 | 43 | Head (3), chest (5), extremity (3) | Grafting + femoral fixation | Alive |
| 11 | M | 18 | 7.84 | 35 | Chest (5), extremity (3) | Grafting + femoral fixation | Alive |
| 12 | M | 19 | 7.84 | 30 | Chest (5) | Grafting | Alive |
| 13 | F | 69 | 4.5 | 65 | Chest (5), abdominal (6) | Partial hepatectomy ET (direct closure) | Dead |
| 14 | M | 17 | 7.55 | 45 | Chest (5 → 6), extremity (3) | ET | Dead |
| 15 | M | 20 | 4.5 | 75 | Chest (5), abdominal (5), extremity (5) | TAE → grafting | Dead |
| 16 | M | 81 | 5.5 | 70 | Head (3), chest (5), abdominal (6) | EL + ET | Dead |
| 17 | M | 17 | 5.3 | 45 | Head (3), chest (5 → 6) | ET | Dead |
| 18 | M | 18 | 6.9 | 45 | Head (3), chest (6) | ET | Dead |
Injury Severity Score is allocated to each of the six body regions [head, face, chest, abdomen, extremities (including the pelvis) and external]. Only the highest Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS) in each body region is used as a final score (aortic injury is excluded in the calculation of chest AIS). The scores of the three most severely injured body regions are squared and summed to produce the final ISS
TAE transcathetral arterial embolization, EL emergency laparotomy, ET emergency thoracotomy, RTS Revised Trauma Score, ISS Injured Severity Score
Associated injuries (body area of AIS > 3)
| N | Head and neck | Face and chest | Abdomen | Extremity (including pelvis) external |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Subdural hematoma | Rib fractures | Femoral fractures | |
| 2 | Hemopneumothorax | Femoral fractures | ||
| 3 | Tension pneumothorax | Spleen lacerations Kidney lacerations | Pelvic fractures | |
| 4 | Rib fractures | Femoral fracture | ||
| 5 | Cerebral contusion | Hemopneumothorax lung contusion | Pelvic fractur | |
| 6 | Cerebral contusion Cervical fracture | Rib fractures | Injury to superior mesenteric artery Injury to small intestine | Extremity fracture |
| 7 | Facial laceration | Rib fractures | ||
| 8 | Rib fractures | Pelvic fracture Extremity fracture | ||
| 9 | Hemopneumothorax | Kidney laceration | Femoral fracture | |
| 10 | Cerebral contusion | Hemopneumothorax | Liver laceration | Femoral fracture |
| 11 | Facial laceration | Hemopneumothorax | Pelvic fracture | |
| 12 | Hemopneumothorax | Extremity fracture | ||
| 13 | Sever pulmonary insufficiency | Liver ulceration | ||
| 14 | Hemopneumothorax | Femoral fracture | ||
| 15 | Hemopneumothorax Rib fractures | Liver lacerations Kidney ulceration | Pelvic fracture | |
| 16 | Hemopneumothorax | Liver laceration | Pelvic fracture | |
| 17 | Cerebral contusion | Hemopneumothorax | ||
| 18 | Vertebral fracture Spinal injury | Hemopneumothorax Rib fractures |
Anatomic scoring system
| Abbreviated Injury Score (AIS)-90 |
|---|
| AIS 1 = minor |
| AIS 2 = moderate |
| AIS 3 = serious (nonlife-threatening injury) |
| AIS 4 = severe (life-threatening but survival) |
| AIS 5 = critical, survival uncertain |
| AIS 6 = maximum (currently untreatable) |
AIS is allocated to each of the six types of injury
Physiologic scoring system
| Revised Trauma Score (RTS) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| GCS | SBP | RR | Score |
| 13–15 | ≥90 | 10–29 | 4 |
| 9–12 | 76–89 | ≥30 | 3 |
| 6–8 | 50–75 | 6–9 | 2 |
| 4–5 | 1–49 | 1–5 | 1 |
| 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Revised Trauma Score (RTS) is allocated to each of the five points on the Glasgow coma scale, systolic blood pressure and RR (respiration rate). These three scores are then summed to produce the RTS
RTS = 0.9368 × GCS Score + 0.7326 × SBP Score + 0.2908 × RR Score
GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, SBP systolic blood pressure, RR respiratory rate
Patient outcomes
| Alive ( | Dead ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years [mean]/range) | 34.6 ± 15.7 (18–63) | 37 ± 29.7 (17–81) | 0.86 |
| Period between trauma and arrival | 411 ± 1,179.5 min (28 min–3 days) | 70.5 ± 83.6 min (9–255 min) | 0.81 |
| Period between arrival and treatment | 47.7 ± 130.4 h (1.8 h–20 days) | 2.6 ± 1.8 h (0.5–5.3 h) | 0.02 |
| ISS [mean]/(range) | 40.8 ± 8.5 (26–50) | 57.5 ± 14.1 (34–75) | 0.006 |
| RTS [mean]/(range) | 6.13 ± 1.72 (3.07–7.84) | 5.7 ± 1.26 (4.5–7.55) | 0.59 |
Evaluation of ISS by multivariate analysis and ROC curve
|
| Odds | 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ISS | 0.0001 | 2.24 | 1.22–20.06 |
| |||
AUC = 0.833
ISS cut off point = 45.0
CI confidence interval