- Major surgical emergency
- Commonly associated with head, chest, pelvic and bone injuries
- Difficult to diagnose as patient is often unconscious
- AAST (American Association for the Surgery of Trauma) Injury Scale
- Most commonly used injury scoring grades are for liver, kidney, spleen, pancreas
Types
- Blunt – spleen most commonly affected
- Penetrating – liver most commonly affected
- Low velocity – stab wounds
- High velocity – gunshot
Etiology
- Road traffic accidents – seatbelts decrease risk of head injury, but present a risk for abdominal organs
- Gunshot wounds – penetrate peritoneum, causing significant damage to major structures
Pathophysiology
- Can be life threatening as abdominal organs can bleed profusely
- Solid organs e.g. liver and kidneys bleed a lot
- Hollow organs e.g. stomach are not as likely to bleed, but more prone to infection
Liver injuries
- Liver is the most vulnerable abdominal organ to injury
- Serious risk for shock – tissue is delicate and has large blood supply
- Can be lacerated, contused with haematoma
- Severe injury – exsanguination requiring emergency blood
Spleen injuries
- Most common cause of massive bleeding in blunt traumas
- Ruptured spleen can lead to life threatening shock
Pancreatic injuries
- Relatively rare organ to be injured
- However, when injury does occur it has a high mortality rate due delayed diagnosis and treatment
- Delayed diagnosis is common as pancreatic injuries are subtle to identify
- Most evident findings of pancreatic injuries -post-traumatic pancreatitis with blood, edema, and soft tissue infiltration
Kidney injuries
- Causes bloody urine
- A kidney with multiple lacerations can cause fragmentation of kidney tissue
Bowel injuries
- Small intestine most likely to be damaged in penetrating injury
- Causes perforation and gas in cavity
- Associated complications – infection, abscess, bowel obstruction and fistula
Abdominal compartment syndrome
- Occurs when intra-abdominal pressure exceeds 20mmHg
- Can occur as a result of severe abdominal trauma, sepsis or peritonitis
- Can lead to oliguria, respiratory failure and cardiac arrest if abdomen is not decompressed
General clinical features
- Features of shock – pallor, tachycardia, hypotension, cold peripheries, sweating, oliguria
- Abdominal distension
- Pain, tenderness, rebound tenderness, guarding, rigidity, dullness in flank
- Respiratory distress, cyanosis
- London’s sign – abrasion over the abdominal skin suggests possible visceral injury
- Features of specific organ injuries
Investigations
- US Abdomen – FAST (Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma)
- Rapid, noninvasive, bedside investigation of pericardium, splenic, hepatic, pelvic areas
- Diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) – for blunt injury of abdomen
- Through catheter saline/Ringer’s solution infused into peritoneal cavity
- Patient is changed to different positions
- Fluid content aspirated from the abdomen to assess for presence of free blood, leukocytes
- CT, laparoscopy
Treatment
Follow protocol for assessment of major trauma (e.g. road collisions, falls from height)
- Airway control – suction, chin lift
- High flow oxygen
- Cervical spine control
- IV fluids
- Analgesia
- Antibiotics – prophylactic IV antibiotics for compound fractures/penetrating wounds
- Advanced trauma life support (ATLS)
- Primary survey – Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability (neurological status), Exposure
- Secondary survey – head to toe examination to identify other injuries
Surgery
- Emergency laparotomy
- Indications – frank haemoperitoneum, significant DPL, haemodynamically unstable patient, significant intra-abdominal injuries on CT/US