Literature DB >> 26307870

Bowel obstructions and incisional hernias following trauma laparotomy and the nonoperative therapy of solid organ injuries: A retrospective population-based analysis.

Ting Li1, Connal Robertson-More, Anthony R Maclean, Elijah Dixon, Pradeep Navsaria, Andrew J Nicol, Andrew W Kirkpatrick, Chad G Ball.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Small bowel obstruction (SBO) and incisional hernia (IH) represent the most common long-term complications of laparotomy. They may also be more common among injured patients than for elective/nontrauma emergency scenarios. Unfortunately, the population-based incidence of SBO and IH following trauma laparotomy is unknown. The aim of this study was to define the long-term, population-based incidence of SBO and IH following both trauma laparotomy as well as the nonoperative therapy of solid organ injuries.
METHODS: All injured patients admitted to a Level 1 trauma center (2002-2013) who underwent (1) a laparotomy or nonoperative care of (2) splenic and/or (3) hepatic injuries were linked with the Alberta Health Services Discharge Database to identify all readmissions for subsequent SBO and/or IH within the province. Standard statistical methodology was used (p < 0.05).
RESULTS: Of 484 patients who underwent a trauma laparotomy, 29 (6%) and 42 (9%) required readmission for SBO and IH, respectively (0.13 SBO and 0.10 IH admissions per patient year). Patients who underwent nonoperative management of their liver and/or spleen injuries displayed long-term SBO rates of 1% (6 of 619) and 0.7% (4 of 606), respectively. The rate of SBO and IH in patients with unnecessary laparotomies was equivalent to therapeutic procedures (p = 0.183). Topical hemostatic agents, repeat laparotomies, and injury pattern did not alter SBO or IH rates (p > 0.05).
CONCLUSION: The population-based, long-term rate of clinically relevant SBO and IH following trauma laparotomies is 15%. This increases to 19% on a per-admission basis. Nontherapeutic scenarios, injury pattern, topical hemostatics, and open abdomens did not alter complication rates. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Therapeutic study, level IV.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26307870     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000000765

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg        ISSN: 2163-0755            Impact factor:   3.313


  3 in total

1.  Incisional hernia in hepatobiliary and pancreatic surgery: incidence and risk factors.

Authors:  J Chen-Xu; R Bessa-Melo; L Graça; J Costa-Maia
Journal:  Hernia       Date:  2018-11-03       Impact factor: 4.739

2.  Trauma laparoscopy: when to start and when to convert?

Authors:  Oleh Matsevych; Modise Koto; Moses Balabyeki; Colleen Aldous
Journal:  Surg Endosc       Date:  2017-08-10       Impact factor: 4.584

3.  A 30-day prospective audit of all inpatient complications following acute care surgery: How well do we really perform?

Authors:  Chad G. Ball; Patrick Murphy; Kevin Verhoeff; Omar Albusadi; Matthew Patterson; Sandy Widder; S. Morad Hameed; Neil Parry; Kelly Vogt; John B. Kortbeek; Anthony R. MacLean; Paul T. Engels; Timothy Rice; Rahima Nenshi; Kosar Khwaja; Samuel Minor
Journal:  Can J Surg       Date:  2020-03-27       Impact factor: 2.089

  3 in total

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