Blunt abdominal trauma: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "'''Blunt trauma to the abdomen''' occur in most cases due to motor vehicle accidents, crime, or falls. This form of trauma may cause organ contusion, rupture, and/or crushing. Any abdominal or pelvic organ may be affected, but injuries to the spleen and liver are most common. Patients may be haemodynamically unstable due to large intraabdominal bleeding, requiring urgent stabilisation. Accidents, especially motor vehicle accidents, is the number one killer of teenagers...")
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Revision as of 20:40, 6 November 2023

Blunt trauma to the abdomen occur in most cases due to motor vehicle accidents, crime, or falls. This form of trauma may cause organ contusion, rupture, and/or crushing. Any abdominal or pelvic organ may be affected, but injuries to the spleen and liver are most common.

Patients may be haemodynamically unstable due to large intraabdominal bleeding, requiring urgent stabilisation.

Accidents, especially motor vehicle accidents, is the number one killer of teenagers and young adults worldwide.

Pathomechanism

Injury may occur due to compression and rupture (from the impact of the steering wheel, for example), or due to rapid deceleration, causing tearing.

Diagnosis, evaluation, and management

As with all trauma patients, the initial trauma primary survey (ABCDE) and stabilisation is essential.

Even patients with major intra-abdominal injury may present with only mild complaints, and so it’s important to retain a high index of suspicion. It’s also important to keep in mind the possibility of head and spinal injury. The following signs and symptoms are associated with intra-abdominal injury:

  • Abdominal pain
  • Rebound tenderness
  • Hypotension
  • Abdominal distension
  • Abdominal guarding

Intraabdominal bleeding can rapidly cause shock and death, and so investigations should be directed at uncovering this ASAP. The so-called eFAST (extended Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma) is the standard screening examination for intraabdominal free fluid (like blood), pneumothorax, hemopericardium, and tamponade. eFAST takes only a few seconds to perform and can rapidly diagnose the mentioned conditions. However, it should be kept in mind that a negative eFAST doesn’t rule out intraabdominal injury, as eFAST cannot discern diaphragmatic tears, pancreatic injury, bowel perforation, and small amounts of free fluid. The sensitivity of eFAST is also limited. The main objective of eFAST is to decrease the number of people who require a CT scan, thereby shortening their time to surgery.

In case eFAST detects intraabdominal free fluid, the patient has likely suffered large injuries which require surgery, and so the patient should be taken to emergency laparotomy.

In case eFAST does not detect any pathology, an abdominal CT scan should be performed if the risk for intra-abdominal injury isn’t low. If the abdominal CT shows injury, emergency laparotomy should be performed.

Laparotomy allows for direct visualisation of all abdominal organs, providing the best visualisation of any possible injuries. It is indicated if intra-abdominal bleeding is detected (on US or CT), the patient is haemodynamically unstable, or there are signs of peritonitis. In the operating room, tears and lacerations may be sutured or compressed to stop bleeding, and injured parts of organs may be resected.