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 || 10–50% surface area || 1–3&nbsp;cm
| 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&nbsp;cm || >3&nbsp;cm
| III || >50% or >10&nbsp;cm || >3&nbsp;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


*grade II
**laceration:
**hematoma: subcapsular, 10-50% surface area
**hematoma: intraparenchymal <10 cm diameter
**laceration: capsular tear, 1-3 cm depth, <10 cm length
*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

Evaluation

ATLS Blunt Abdominal Trauma Algorithm

  • Unstable
    • FAST to search for free fluid (vs. DPL if unavailable)
      • Positive: Exploratory laparotomy
      • Negative: CT scan
  • Stable
    • CT scan
      • Exploratory laparotomy, angiographic embolization, conservative management as indicated

American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Grading System

The Liver Injury Scale classification[1][2]
Grade Hematoma Laceration
I Subcapsular, <10% surface area capsular tear, <1 cm in depth
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
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 4 liver laceration (arrow).
  • 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

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  4. Error en la cita: Etiqueta <ref> no válida; no se ha definido el contenido de las referencias llamadas polish