Diferencia entre revisiones de «Liver injury»
| Línea 19: | Línea 19: | ||
| I || Subcapsular, <10% surface area || capsular tear, <1 cm in depth | | I || Subcapsular, <10% surface area || capsular tear, <1 cm in depth | ||
|- | |- | ||
| II || | | II || | ||
*Subcapsular: 10-50% surface area | |||
*Intraparenchymal: <10 cm diameter | |||
|| | |||
*Capsular tear: 1-3 cm depth, <10 cm length1–3 cm | |||
|- | |- | ||
| III || >50% or >10 cm || >3 cm | | III || >50% or >10 cm || >3 cm | ||
| Línea 34: | Línea 38: | ||
[[File:Grade4LiverLacMark.png|thumb|Grade 4 liver laceration (arrow).]] | [[File:Grade4LiverLacMark.png|thumb|Grade 4 liver laceration (arrow).]] | ||
*grade I | *grade I | ||
*grade II | |||
**laceration: | |||
**laceration: | |||
*grade III | *grade III | ||
**hematoma: subcapsular, >50% surface area, or ruptured with active bleeding | **hematoma: subcapsular, >50% surface area, or ruptured with active bleeding | ||
Revisión del 18:30 13 jun 2019
Background
- Occurs in 5% of all traumas
- Most common abdominal injury
Clinical Features
Differential Diagnosis
Abdominal Trauma
- Abdominal compartment syndrome
- Diaphragmatic trauma
- Duodenal hematoma
- Genitourinary trauma
- Liver trauma
- Pelvic fractures
- Retroperitoneal hemorrhage
- Renal trauma
- Splenic trauma
- Trauma in pregnancy
- Ureter trauma
Evaluation
ATLS Blunt Abdominal Trauma Algorithm
- Unstable
- Stable
- CT scan
- Exploratory laparotomy, angiographic embolization, conservative management as indicated
- CT scan
American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Grading System
| Grade | Hematoma | Laceration |
|---|---|---|
| I | Subcapsular, <10% surface area | capsular tear, <1 cm in depth |
| II |
|
|
| III | >50% or >10 cm | >3 cm |
| IV | 25–75% of a hepatic lobe | |
| V | >75% of a hepatic lobe | |
| VI | Hepatic avulsion |
Liver injuries are classified on a Roman numeral scale with I being the least severe, to VI being the most severe. Generally any injury ≥III requires surgery.[3][4]
- grade I
- grade II
- laceration:
- grade III
- hematoma: subcapsular, >50% surface area, or ruptured with active bleeding
- hematoma: intraparenchymal >10 cm diameter
- laceration: capsular tear, >3 cm depth
- grade IV
- hematoma: ruptured intraparenchymal with active bleeding
- laceration: parenchymal disruption involving 25-75% hepatic lobe or involves 1-3 Couinaud segments (within one lobe)
- grade V
- laceration: parenchymal disruption involving >75% of hepatic lobe or involves >3 Couinaud segments (within one lobe)
- vascular: juxtahepatic venous injuries (inferior vena cava, major hepatic vein)
- grade VI
- vascular: hepatic avulsion
- Advance one grade for multiple injuries up to grade III
Management
- Nonoperative management is successful in >90% of patients who are hemodynamically stable
- Low-grade injuries (grades I–III) can almost always be managed without surgery
- Higher-grade injuries commonly fail nonoperative therapy.
- Consider angiographic embolization if:
- Large amount of hemoperitoneum
- Vascular injury (contrast blush) on CT
Disposition
- Typically admission via OR, IR, or floor/ICU for conservative management
See Also
References
- ↑ Error en la cita: Etiqueta
<ref>no válida; no se ha definido el contenido de las referencias llamadaspiper - ↑ Error en la cita: Etiqueta
<ref>no válida; no se ha definido el contenido de las referencias llamadasclay - ↑ Error en la cita: Etiqueta
<ref>no válida; no se ha definido el contenido de las referencias llamadasblunt - ↑ Error en la cita: Etiqueta
<ref>no válida; no se ha definido el contenido de las referencias llamadaspolish
