Blunt Abdominal Trauma in a European Trauma Setting : Need for Complex or Non-Complex Skills in Emergency Laparotomy

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Kosola , J , Brinck , T , Leppäniemi , A & Handolin , L 2020 , ' Blunt Abdominal Trauma in a European Trauma Setting : Need for Complex or Non-Complex Skills in Emergency Laparotomy ' , Scandinavian Journal of Surgery , vol. 109 , no. 2 , pp. 89-95 . https://doi.org/10.1177/1457496919828244

Title: Blunt Abdominal Trauma in a European Trauma Setting : Need for Complex or Non-Complex Skills in Emergency Laparotomy
Author: Kosola, J.; Brinck, T.; Leppäniemi, A.; Handolin, L.
Contributor organization: HUS Musculoskeletal and Plastic Surgery
Clinicum
I kirurgian klinikka (Töölö)
Helsinki University Hospital Area
University of Helsinki
HUS Abdominal Center
II kirurgian klinikka
Department of Surgery
Date: 2020-06
Language: eng
Number of pages: 7
Belongs to series: Scandinavian Journal of Surgery
ISSN: 1457-4969
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1457496919828244
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/331938
Abstract: Background and Aims: Blunt abdominal trauma can lead to substantial organ injury and hemorrhage necessitating open abdominal surgery. Currently, the trend in surgeon training is shifting away from general surgery and the surgical treatment of blunt abdominal trauma patients is often done by sub-specialized surgeons. The aim of this study was to identify what emergency procedures are needed after blunt abdominal trauma and whether they can be performed with the skill set of a general surgeon. Materials and Methods: The records of blunt abdominal trauma patients requiring emergency laparotomy (n = 100) over the period 2006-2016 (Helsinki University Hospital Trauma Registry) were reviewed. The organ injuries and the complexity of the procedures were evaluated. Results: A total of 89 patients (no need for complex skills, NCS) were treated with the skill set of general surgeons while 11 patients required complex skills. Complex skills patients were more severely injured (New Injury Severity Score 56.4 vs 35.9, p <0.001) and had a lower systolic blood pressure (mean: 89 vs 112, p = 0.044) and higher mean shock index (heart rate/systolic blood pressure: 1.43 vs 0.95, p = 0.012) on admission compared with NCS patients. The top three NCS procedures were splenectomy (n = 33), bowel repair (n = 31), and urinary bladder repair (n = 16). In patients requiring a complex procedure (CS), the bleeding site was the liver (n = 7) or a major blood vessel (n = 4). Conclusion: The majority of patients requiring emergency laparotomy can be managed with the skills of a general surgeon. Non-responder blunt abdominal trauma patients with positive ultrasound are highly likely to require complex skills. The future training of surgeons should concentrate on NCS procedures while at the same time recognizing those injuries requiring complex skills.
Subject: Acute care surgery and trauma
general surgery
upper gastrointestinal surgery
hepato-pancreatic biliary surgery
vascular surgery
colorectal surgery
3126 Surgery, anesthesiology, intensive care, radiology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: unspecified
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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