| Literature DB >> 35799209 |
Andrea Katharina Lindner1, Anna Katharina Luger2, Josef Fritz3, Johannes Stäblein1, Christian Radmayr1, Friedrich Aigner2, Peter Rehder1, Gennadi Tulchiner1, Wolfgang Horninger1, Renate Pichler4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current guidelines recommend repeat computed tomography (CT) imaging in high-grade blunt renal injury within 48-96 h, yet diagnostic value and clinical significance remain controversial. The aim of this work was to determine the possible gain of CT re-imaging in uncomplicated patients with blunt renal trauma at 48 h after injury, presenting one of the largest case series.Entities:
Keywords: Blunt renal trauma; Non-operative management; Repeat imaging; Selected imaging; Selective angioembolization
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35799209 PMCID: PMC9264658 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-022-00445-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 8.165
Fig. 1Patient flowchart
Fig. 2Classification of renal trauma using the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) renal injury scale. Arterial and portal venous phase imaging is recommended for evaluation. Clinical or imaging findings suggesting collecting system injury should be followed by a delayed excretory phase to detect urine extravasation. The imaging classification criteria are as follows: grade 1 (A): subcapsular haematoma or contusion, without laceration; grade 2 (B–C): superficial laceration ≤ 1 cm depth not involving the collecting system with no evidence of urine extravasation (B) or perirenal haematoma confined within the perirenal fascia (C); grade 3 (D): laceration > 1 cm not involving the collecting system, vascular injury or active bleeding confined within the perirenal fascia; grade 4 (E): laceration involving the collecting system with urinary extravasation, laceration of the renal pelvis, vascular injury to segmental renal artery or vein, segmental infarctions without associated active bleeding or active bleeding extending beyond the perirenal fascia, grade 5 (F–G): shattered kidney (F), avulsion of renal hilum or laceration of the main renal artery or vein or devascularized kidney (G) [19]
Descriptive patient characteristics of the study population
| Characteristics | Total | Grade 1–3 injury | Grade 4–5 injury | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injury grade, | – | |||
| 1 | 7 (2.5%) | 7 | – | |
| 2 | 50 (17.9%) | 50 | – | |
| 3 | 93 (33.2%) | 93 | – | |
| 4 | 119 (42.5%) | – | 119 | |
| 5 | 11 (3.9%) | – | 11 | |
| Age [years], mean (SD) | 38.1 (18.0) | 38.1 (16.9) | 38.2 (19.3) | 0.945 |
| Male sex, | 244 (87.1%) | 129 (86.0%) | 115 (88.5%) | 0.594 |
| Inpatient stay [days], mean (SD) | 8.5 (5.1) | 6.6 (3.9) | 10.6 (5.4) | < 0.001 |
| Intervention (overall), | 101 (36.1%) | 7 (4.7%) | 94 (72.3%) | < 0.001 |
| Intervention (trauma day), | 59 (21.1%) | 0 (0.0%) | 59 (45.4%) | < 0.001 |
| Severity of intervention (trauma day) | – | |||
| Minimal-invasive | 48 (81.4%) | – | 48 (81.4%) | |
| Open | 11 (18.6%) | – | 11 (18.6%) | |
| Clinical progress | 35 (12.5%) | 3 (2.0%) | 32 (24.6%) | < 0.001 |
| Severity of intervention (clinical progress) | 0.536 | |||
| Minimal-invasive | 23 (65.7%) | 3 (100.0%) | 20 (62.5%) | |
| Open | 12 (34.3%) | 0 (0.0%) | 12 (37.5%) | |
| Time of clinical progress after trauma [days], mean (SD) | 5.3 (4.1) | 6.7 (3.5) | 5.2 (4.2) | 0.561 |
| Intervention (CT control 48 h), n (%) | 16 (5.7%) | 5 (3.3%) | 11 (8.5%) | 0.075 |
| Severity of intervention (CT 48 h) | 0.516 | |||
| Minimal-invasive | 11 (73.3%) | 4 (100.0%) | 7 (63.6%) | |
| Open | 4 (26.7%) | 0 (0.0%) | 4 (36.4%) | |
| Creatinine [mg/dl] at trauma day, mean (SD) | 1.01 (0.22) | 0.98 (0.21) | 1.05 (0.24) | 0.021 |
| Hb [mg/dl] at trauma day, mean (SD) | 121.4 (23.3) | 131.6 (17.6) | 109.6 (23.6) | < 0.001 |
| Macrohaematuria at trauma, | 148 (52.9%) | 75 (50.0%) | 73 (56.2%) | 0.338 |
*p Values from Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables, and independent t-tests for quantitative variables
Multivariate logistic regression analysis to predict clinical progress
| Baseline factors | Odds ratio (OR) | 95% confidence interval (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (per one-year increase) | 1.001 | 0.980–1.022 | 0.934 |
| Sex (male vs. female) | 0.851 | 0.246–2.951 | 0.800 |
| Gross haematuria (yes vs. no) | 0.510 | 0.214–1.212 | 0.127 |
| Severity of trauma | – | 0.001 | |
| Grade 4 (vs. Grade 3) | 14.624 | 4.162–51.384 | < 0.001 |
| Grade 5 (vs. Grade 3) | 22.878 | 2.733–191.536 | 0.004 |
| Intervention at trauma day (yes vs. no) | 3.219 | 1.271–8.149 | 0.014 |
Multivariate model adjusted for age, sex, haematuria at baseline, severity of trauma and intervention at trauma day. CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio