| Literature DB >> 27766112 |
Federico Coccolini1, Fausto Catena2, Ernest E Moore3, Rao Ivatury4, Walter Biffl5, Andrew Peitzman6, Raul Coimbra7, Sandro Rizoli8, Yoram Kluger9, Fikri M Abu-Zidan10, Marco Ceresoli1, Giulia Montori1, Massimo Sartelli11, Dieter Weber12, Gustavo Fraga13, Noel Naidoo14, Frederick A Moore15, Nicola Zanini16, Luca Ansaloni1.
Abstract
The severity of liver injuries has been universally classified according to the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) grading scale. In determining the optimal treatment strategy, however, the haemodynamic status and associated injuries should be considered. Thus the management of liver trauma is ultimately based on the anatomy of the injury and the physiology of the patient. This paper presents the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) classification of liver trauma and the management Guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: Classification; Guidelines; Hemorrage; Liver trauma; Minor; Moderate; Non-operative management; Operative management; Severe; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27766112 PMCID: PMC5057434 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-016-0105-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
AAST Liver Trauma Classification
| Grade | Injury type | Injury description |
|---|---|---|
| I | Haematoma | Subcapsular <10 % surface |
| Laceration | Capsular tear <1 cm parenchymal depth | |
| II | Haematoma | Subcapsular 10–50 % surface area; intraprenchymal, <10 cm diameter |
| Laceration | 1–3 cm parenchymal depth, <10 cm in length | |
| III | Haematoma | Subcapsular >50 % surface area or expanding, ruptured subcapsular or parenchymal haematoma. Intraprenchymal haematoma >10 cm |
| Laceration | >3 cm parenchymal depth | |
| IV | Laceration | Parenchymal disruption 25–75 % of hepatic lobe |
| Vascular | Juxtavenous hepatic injuries i.e. retrohepatic vena cava/centrl major hepatic veins | |
| VI | Vascular | Hepatic avulsion |
Advance one grade for multiple injuries up to grade III
AAST liver injury scale (1994 revision)
WSES Liver Trauma Classification
| WSES grade | Blunt/Penetrating (Stab/Guns) | AAST | Haemodynamic | CT-scan | First-line Treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MINOR | WSES grade I | B/P | I-II | Stable | ||
| MODERATE | WSES grade II | B/P | III | Stable | Yes | NOM* |
| SEVERE | WSES grade III | B/P | IV-V | Stable | ||
| WSES grade IV | B/P | I-VI | Unstable | No | OM |
(SW Stab Wound, GSW Gun Shot Wound; OM: Operative Management; NOM: Non Operative Management; *NOM should only be attempted in centers capable of a precise diagnosis of the severity of liver injuries and capable of intensive management (close clinical observation and haemodynamic monitoring in a high dependency/intensive care environment, including serial clinical examination and laboratory assay, with immediate access to diagnostics, interventional radiology and surgery and immediately available access to blood and blood products; # wound exploration near the inferior costal margin should be avoided if not strictly necessary because of the high risk to damage the intercostal vessels)
Fig. 1Liver Trauma Management Algorithm. (SW Stab Wound, GSW Gun Shot Wound; *NOM should only be attempted in centers capable of a precise diagnosis of the severity of liver injuries and capable of intensive management (close clinical observation and haemodynamic monitoring in a high dependency/intensive care environment, including serial clinical examination and laboratory assay, with immediate access to diagnostics, interventional radiology and surgery and immediately available access to blood and blood products; # wound exploration near the inferior costal margin should be avoided if not strictly necessary because of the high risk to damage the intercostal vessels; @ extremely selected patients hemodynamically stable with evisceration and/or impalement and/or diffuse peritonitis with the certainty of an exclusive and isolated abdominal lesion could be considered as candidate to be directly taken to the operating room without contrast enanched CT-scan)