| Literature DB >> 26500690 |
Bruno Monteiro T Pereira1, Osvaldo Chiara2, Fabio Ramponi3, Dieter G Weber4, Stefania Cimbanassi2, Belinda De Simone5, Korana Musicki3, Guilherme Vieira Meirelles1, Fausto Catena5, Luca Ansaloni6, Federico Coccolini6, Massimo Sartelli7, Salomone Di Saverio8, Cino Bendinelli4, Gustavo Pereira Fraga1.
Abstract
Trauma, both blunt and penetrating, is extremely common worldwide, as trauma to major vessels. The management of these patients requires specialized surgical skills and techniques of the trauma surgeon. Furthermore few other surgical emergencies require immediate diagnosis and treatment like a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (rAAA). Mortality of patients with a rAAA reaches 85 %, with more than half dying before reaching the hospital. These are acute events demanding immediate intervention to save life and limb and precluding any attempt at transfer or referral. It is the purpose of this position paper to discuss neck, chest, extremities and abdominal trauma, bringing to light recent evidence based data as well as expert opinions; besides, in this paper we present a review of the recent literature on rAAA and we discuss the rationale for transfer to referral center, the role of preoperative imaging and the pros and cons of Endoluminal repair of rAAA (REVAR) versus Open Repair (OR).Entities:
Keywords: Ruptured abdominal aorta aneurism; Trauma; Vascular Trauma: Neck, Chest and Extremities; Vascular control; Vascular injuries
Year: 2015 PMID: 26500690 PMCID: PMC4618918 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-015-0037-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Hard signs and soft signs of arterial injury [17–19]
| Hard signs of arterial injury | Soft signs of arterial injury |
|---|---|
| (Requires immediate surgery) | (Consider further examination) |
| External arterial bleeding | History of arterial bleeding at the scene |
| Rapidly expanding hematoma | Proximity of penetrating/blunt trauma to major artery |
| Palpable thrill | Diminished unilateral distal pulse |
| Audible bruit | Small nonpulsatile hematoma |
| Obvious arterial occlusion (6 p ‘s: pulseless, pallor, paresthesia, paralysis, poikilothermia) | Neurologic deficit |
| Abnormal Ankle-Brachial pressure index (<0.9) | |
| Abnormal flow-velocity waveform on Doppler ultrasound |
Fig. 1Glass-coated kite line zone II neck injury
Classification system of abdominal vascular system [17–19]
| OIS grade | Description of injuries |
|---|---|
| I | Non-named superior mesenteric artery and vein, and their branches, phrenic artery/vein, lumbar artery/vein, gonadal artery/vein, ovarian artery/vein |
| II | Right, left, common hepatic artery, splenic artery/vein, right or left gastric arteries, gastroduodenal artery, inferior mesenteric artery/vein, primary branches of mesenteric artery/vein |
| III | Superior mesenteric vein trunk, renal artery/vein, iliac artery/vein, hypogastric artery/vein, vena cava, infrarenal |
| IV | Superior mesenteric artery trunk, celiac axis proper, vena cava suprarenal and infrahepatic, aorta, infrarenal. |
| V | Portal vein, extra-parenchymal hepatic vein, vena cava retrohepatic or suprahepatic, aorta suprarenal, subdiaphragmatic |
Fig. 2Zones of superior mesenteric artery: angiographic view was excluded
Fig. 3a Abdominal CT with IV contrast of a patient with symptomatic AAA. b Non-contrast abdominal CT of the same patient after collapse about 2 h later. The AAA ruptured as is evident from the retroperitoneal hematoma
Fig. 4Abdominal CT with IV contrast demonstrating a large infrarenal AAA ruptured in the inferior vena cava in axial and sagittal view
Fig. 53D reconstruction of large infrarenal AAA ruptured into the inferior vena cava
Fig. 6Flowchart of the rAAA protocol introduced by the Albany Group [80]
Fig. 7Flowchart of the STAT VASCULAR program from the University of Illinois [82]
Characteristics of the most commonly used endografts for rAAA
| Cook Zenith® | Medtronic® | Gore® | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LP AAA | Flex AAA, Spiral-Z Iliac | Endurant II | Excluder AAA | |
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| Indications for use | ||||
| Infrarenal neck fixation | ||||
| Diameter | 18–28 mm | 18–32 mm | 19–32 mm | 19–32 mm |
| Length | ≥15 mm | ≥15 mm | ≥10 mm or ≥15 mm | ≥15 mm |
| Angle (to suprarenal) | <45 deg | <45 deg | ≤45 deg or ≤60 deg | ≤60 deg |
| Angle (to aneurysm) | <60 deg | <60 deg | ≤60 deg or ≤75 deg | ≤60 deg |
| Iliac (ipsi/contra) fixation | ||||
| Diameter | 8–20 mm | 7.5–20 mm | 8–25 mm | 8–25 mm |
| Length | >10 mm | >10 mm | ≥15 mm | ≥10 mm |
| Iliofemoral access | ||||
| Sheath inner diameter | 16Fr (5.3 mm) | 18–22Fr (6.0–7.3 mm) | – | 18–20Fr (6.1–6.8 mm) |
| Sheath out diameter | 18Fr (6.0 mm) | 21–26Fr (7.1–8.5 mm) | 18–20Fr (6.0–6.7 mm) | 20–27Fr (6.8–7.5 mm) |
| Graft specifications | ||||
| Materials | ||||
| Stents | Nitinol (self-expanding) | Stainless steel and nitinol | Nitinol | Nitinol |
| Grafts | Polyester (& PTFE) | Polyester | Polyester | ePTFE (& FEP) |
| Modular system, bifurcated main body device | ||||
| Fixation/sealing | Suprarenal bare stent, barbs, radial force | Suprarenal bare stent, barbs, radial force | Suprarenal bare stent, barbs, radial force | Graft sealing cuff, barbs, radial force |
| Diameter (~15 % oversize) | 22–32 mm | 22–36 mm | 23–36 mm | 23–35 mm |
| Length (body-ipsilateral) | 94–152 mm | 112–170 mm | 124–166 mm | 120–180 mm |
| Length - body-contralateral | 70–128 mm | 82–140 mm | 70–80 mm | 70–90 mm |
| Modular system, iliac extension device | ||||
| Diameter (~15 % oversize) | 10–24 mm | 9–24 mm | 10–28 mm | 12–27 mm |
| Length (limb) | 36–120 mm | 39–122 mm | 82–199 mm | 70–140 mm |
| Aortouniiliac device | ||||
| Fixation/sealing | – | Suprarenal bare stent, barbs, radial force | Suprarenal bare stent, barbs, radial force | Graft sealing cuff, barbs, radial force |
| Diameter (~15 % oversize) | – | 22–36 mm | 23–36 mm | 23–31 mm |
| Length (body-ipsilateral) | – | 130–161 mm | 102 mm | 120–180 mm |
| Ancillary components | ||||
| Main body extension | 45–58 mm length | 39–73 mm length | 49–70 mm length | 33–45 mm length |
| Converters | 66 mm length | 80–82 mm length | – | – |
| Iliac plugs | – | 14–24 mm diameter | – | – |