| Literature DB >> 30373641 |
Tor Brommeland1, Eirik Helseth2,3, Mads Aarhus2, Kent Gøran Moen4,5, Stig Dyrskog6, Bo Bergholt7, Zandra Olivecrona8, Elisabeth Jeppesen9.
Abstract
Blunt cerebrovascular injury (BCVI) is a non-penetrating injury to the carotid and/or vertebral artery that may cause stroke in trauma patients. Historically BCVI has been considered rare but more recent publications indicate an overall incidence of 1-2% in the in-hospital trauma population and as high as 9% in patients with severe head injury. The indications for screening, treatment and follow-up of these patients have been controversial for years with few clear recommendations. In an attempt to provide a clinically oriented guideline for the handling of BCVI patients a working committee was created. The current guideline is the end result of this committees work. It is based on a systematic literature search and critical review of all available publications in addition to a standardized consensus process. We recommend using the expanded Denver screening criteria and CT angiography (CTA) for the detection of BCVI. Early antithrombotic treatment should be commenced as soon as considered safe and continued for at least 3 months. A CTA at 7 days to confirm or discard the diagnosis as well as a final imaging control at 3 months should be performed.Entities:
Keywords: CT angiography; Guidelines; Screening; Trauma; Vascular injury
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30373641 PMCID: PMC6206718 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-018-0559-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
The PICO model: Population, Intervention, Comparison and Outcome
| Clinical question | P | I | C | O |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| What part of the trauma population should be screened for BCVI? | In-hospital trauma population | Clinical critera | Various screening criteria | Indications for radiological investigation |
| Which radiological method should be applied for screening? | Selected trauma population | Angiogram | CTA versus DSA | Vessel injury |
| How should BCVI be treated? | Trauma patients with vessel injury on angiogram | Medical or interventional treatment | Medical versus interventional versus no treatment | Stroke |
| How should patients with BCVI be handled over time? | Trauma patients with vessel injury on angiogram | Follow-up controls | Life long versus period of treatment | Stroke |
CTA CT angiography, DSA digital subtraction angiography
Overview of clinical recommendations, strength, level of evidence and scientific rationale
| Clinical question | Recommendation | Strength of recommendation | Level of evidence | Rationale (Benefits and harms) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| What part of the trauma population should be screened for BCVI? | Apply expanded Denver screening criteria | Strong | Low | A documented screening tool ensures focus on the condition. Possible danger of overtriage and unnecessary use of imaging. |
| Which radiological method should be applied for screening? | CTA has acceptable specificity and sensitivity. DSA remains gold standard | Strong | Moderate | DSA is time consuming, invasive with potential complications and often not available 24–7. CTA is fast and available with lower complication risk. CTA has higher radiation exposure with a risk of false positive findings. |
| How should BCVI be treated? | Early treatment with either LMWH or AP medication | Strong | Low | Uncertainty of treatment effect. Studies show that early treatment is safe. Risk is worsening of existing hemorrhage. |
| Continue treatment with LMWH or AP for at least 3 months | Strong | Low | Long term AP treatment is generally safe, but may cause side effects such as peptic ulcer. | |
| Pseudoaneurysm or high-grade vessel injury may be considered for endovascular treatment | Conditional | Low | May prevent new or recurrent stroke, but uncertainty of treatment effect or stent patency. Double platelet-inhibitors increases risk of hemorrhage in trauma patients. | |
| How should patients with BCVI be handled over time? | Perform re-imaging at 7 days and 3 months. | Conditional | Low | Repeat imaging can confirm or discard the diagnosis of BCVI. Risk is radiation exposure. |
BCVI blunt cerebrovascular injury, CTA CT angiography, DSA digital subtraction angiography, LMWH low molecular weight heparin, AP anti-platelet
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for selection of included studies
The expanded Denver screening criteria for BCVI. CT angiography is indicated if one or more of the criteria are present
| Signs/symptoms of BCVI | |
| Arterial hemorrhage from neck/nose/mouth | |
| Cervical bruit in patients < 50 years | |
| Expanding cervical hematoma | |
| Focal neurological deficit | |
| Neurological exam incongruous with head CT findings | |
| Stroke on secondary CT scan | |
| Risk factors for BVCI | |
| Le Fort II or III | |
| Mandible fracture | |
| Complex skull fracture/basilar skull fracture/occipital condyle fracture | |
| Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) with GCS < 6 | |
| Cervical spine fracture, subluxation or ligamentous injury at any level | |
| Near hanging with anoxic brain injury | |
| Seat belt abrasion with significant swelling, pain or altered mental status | |
| TBI with thoracic injury | |
| Scalp degloving | |
| Thoracic vascular injury | |
| Blunt cardiac rupture | |
| Upper rib fracture |
From Geddes et al.: Expanded screening criteria for blunt cerebrovascular injury: A bigger impact than anticipated (Geddes et al., 2016)
The Biffl injury grading scale for BCVI
| Biffl injury grade | Angiograhic characteristics |
|---|---|
| I | Luminal irregularity or dissection with < 25% luminal narrowing |
| II | Dissection or intramural hematoma with ≥25% luminal narrowing |
| III | Pseudoaneurysm |
| IV | Occlusion |
| V | Transection with free extravasation |
From Biffl et al.: Blunt carotid arterial injuries: implications of a new grading scale (Biffl et al. 1999)
Fig. 2Flow-diagram summarizing the current guidelines for screening, treatment and followup of patients with BCVI