| Literature DB >> 26213565 |
Federico Coccolini1, Walter Biffl2, Fausto Catena3, Marco Ceresoli1, Osvaldo Chiara4, Stefania Cimbanassi4, Luca Fattori5, Ari Leppaniemi6, Roberto Manfredi1, Giulia Montori1, Giovanni Pesenti5, Michael Sugrue7, Luca Ansaloni1.
Abstract
The indications for Open Abdomen (OA) are generally all those situations in which is ongoing the development an intra-abdominal hypertension condition (IAH), in order to prevent the development of abdominal compartmental syndrome (ACS). In fact all those involved in care of a critically ill patient should in the first instance think how to prevent IAH and ACS. In case of ACS goal directed therapy to achieve early opening and early closure is the key: paradigm of closure shifts to combination of therapies including negative pressure wound therapy and dynamic closure, in order to reduce complications and avoid incisional hernia. There have been huge studies and progress in survival of critically ill trauma and septic surgical patients: this in part has been through the great work of pioneers, scientific societies and their guidelines; however future studies and continued innovation are needed to better understand optimal treatment strategies and to define more clearly the indications, because OA by itself is still a morbid procedure.Entities:
Keywords: Closure; Management; Open abdomen; Pancreatitis; Peritonitis; Trauma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26213565 PMCID: PMC4515003 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-015-0026-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Fig. 1Schematic flow-chart for the treatment of the open abdomen
Consensus definitions related to intra-abdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome
| IAP | The steady-state pressure concealed within the abdominal cavity. Normal = 5–7 mmHg in critically ill adults |
| APP | MAP – IAP |
| IAH | Sustained or repeated pathological elevation of IAP ≥12 mmHg |
| ACS | Sustained IAP >20 mmHg (with or without APP <60 mmHg) that is associated with a new organ dysfunction or failure |
| Primary ACS | ACS associated with injury or disease in abdomino-pelvic cavity |
| Secondary ACS | ACS in absence of conditions originating in the abdomino-pelvic cavity |
IAP intra-abdominal pressure, APP abdominal perfusion pressure, MAP mean arterial pressure, IAH intra-abdominal hypertension, ACS abdominal compartment syndrome. Adapted from Malbrain et al. [6]
The effects of IAH on various organ systems, and clinical manifestations of ACS
| System | Effect | Manifestation |
|---|---|---|
|
| Renal vein compression, cortical arteriolar compression | Oliguria, rising creatinine |
|
| Upward pressure on diaphragm, decreased compliance and functional residual capacity, increased air way resistance | Hypoxia, hypercarbia, elevated airway pressure, decreased tidal volume |
|
| Decreased venous return, increased afterload | Decreased cardiac output |
|
| Increased intrathoracic pressure with decreased cerebral venous outflow | Elevated Intra Cranial Pressure |
|
| Decreased perfusion of liver and intestine | Metabolic acidosis, bowel ischemia |
Fig. 2Synthetic mesh sutured to the fascial edges to maintain the traction and prevent the fascial retraction with a plastic sheet posed under in direct contact with the intrabdominal content to protect the bowel
Fig. 3Aspiration system could be placed over the eventual continuous traction system