| Literature DB >> 27401440 |
Sophie Rym Hamada1, Nathalie Delhaye2, Sebastien Kerever3,4,5, Anatole Harrois6, Jacques Duranteau6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The initial management of a trauma patient is a critical and demanding period. The use of extended focused assessment sonography for trauma (eFAST) has become more prevalent in trauma rooms, raising questions about the real "added value" of chest X-rays (CXRs) and pelvic X-rays (PXR), particularly in haemodynamically stable trauma patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a management protocol integrating eFAST and excluding X-rays in stable trauma patients.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic accuracy; Imaging; Resuscitation; Severe trauma; Stability; Ultrasound
Year: 2016 PMID: 27401440 PMCID: PMC4940356 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-016-0166-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1Institutional protocol. *Criteria collected during prehospital and trauma bay period (before CT scan). SBP systolic blood pressure, HR heart rate, SpO peripheral oxygen saturation, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, FAST focused assessment with sonography for trauma, CT scan computed tomography
Fig. 2Flow chart of the study. X-R X-ray, CRX chest X-ray, PXR pelvic X-ray
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the study population
| Stability criteria group | No stability criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 31 [22, 43] | 36 [26; 53] |
| Sex (male) (%) | 114 (77) | 196 (70) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 24 [22, 26] | 24 [22, 28] |
| ASA | 1 [1; 1] | 1 [1, 2] |
| Vittel criteria | 1 [1, 2] | 3 [2, 4] |
| SAPS 2 | 13 [8, 19] | 25 [15, 40] |
| ISS | 9 [4, 14] | 17 [9, 28] |
|
| ||
| MVA | 40 (27) | 98 (35) |
| Motorbike | 59 (40) | 53 (19) |
| Cyclist | 3 (2) | 10 (4) |
| Pedestrian | 9 (6) | 34 (12) |
| Fall | 32 (22) | 66 (23) |
| Other | 5 (3) | 21 (7) |
| Chest AIS > 2 | 32 (22) | 114 (40) |
| Pelvis AIS > 2 | 14 (10) | 45 (16) |
| Catheters before CT scan | 38 (26) | 183 (65) |
| Mechanical ventilation (days) | 1 [0; 1] | 1 [0; 5] |
| Intensive care unit length of stay (days) | 2 [2; 5] | 5 [3; 12] |
| Hospital length of stay (days) | 8 [4; 16] | 13 [7; 23] |
| Mortality | 1 (0.7) | 31 (11) |
Values shown are n (%) or median [25th; 75th percentile]
BMI body mass index, ASA American Society of Anaesthesiologists. SAPS 2 Simplified Acute Physiology Score, ISS Injury Severity Score, MVA motor vehicle accident, AIS Abbreviated Injury Scale
Comparison of physical examination, chest X-ray (CXR) and e-FAST for the diagnosis of pneumothorax, pneumothorax requiring chest drainage and haemothorax in the stability criteria group
| CT diagnosis | eFAST | Physical examination | Chest X-ray ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All pneumothoraces | 21 | 6 (29 %) | 4 (19 %) | 3 (14 %) |
| Drained pneumothoraces | 5 | 5 (100 %) | 3 (60 %) | 3 (60 %) |
| All haemothoracesa | 3 | 1 (33 %) | 1 (33 %) | 0 (0 %) |
aNone of the haemothoraces required a chest drainage within the first 24 h