GI
Abdominal Trauma
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Abdominal Trauma
, Abdominal Injury, Blunt Abdominal Trauma, Traumatic Bowel Injury
See Also
Pediatric Blunt Abdominal Trauma
Trauma Evaluation
Penetrating Trauma
Causes
Blunt Abdominal Trauma
Direct blow to the
Abdomen
(e.g.
Contact Sport
s,
Motor Vehicle Accident
)
Fall from Height
Cycling handlbar injury
Associated Conditions
Liver Laceration
Splenic Rupture
Renal Injury
Pancreatic Injury
Hollow viscus (bowel perforation) or
Lumbar Spine Injury
Seat Belt
Deceleration injury
Traumatic Bowel Injury
Occurs in 1% of Blunt Abdominal Trauma (20% of
Penetrating Trauma
)
Gastrointestinal
Hemorrhage
Symptoms
Persistent
Abdominal Pain
after injury
Pain may be referred to the
Shoulder
s
Fever
Nausea
Vomiting
Bright Red Blood Per Rectum
Signs
Localized
Abdominal Pain
Abdominal guarding
Abdominal
Rebound Tenderness
Abdominal rigidity
Abdominal wall
Bruising
Seat Belt Sign
is a red flag, and associated with enough force to cause intraabdominal injury
Seat Belt Sign
is associated with a 12% risk of bowel injury or
Splenic Injury
Examination
Evaluate for peritonitis or hemodynamic instability
Fever
Hypotension
Tachycardia
Complete abdominal exam
Rectal Exam
ination
Decreased
Rectal Tone
(
Spinal Injury
)
High riding
Prostate
(
Urethra
l transection)
Bloody stool on
Rectal Exam
Imaging
Indications
See precautions below
Do not delay an exploratory laparoscopy that is clearly indicated
Suspected occult internal bleeding with decreasing
Hematocrit
and no obvious source
Non-diagnostic examination with higher clinical suspicion
Equivocal peritoneal signs with abdominal tenderness and guarding
Altered Level of Consciousness
and suspected Abdominal Trauma
Negative abdominal exam but high level of suspicion based on mechanism of injury
Bony
Fracture
with associated abdominal tenderness or guarding
Multiple lower
Rib Fracture
s
Lumbar transverse process
Fracture
Pelvic Fracture
Imaging
First-line studies
FAST Exam
CT Abdomen and Pelvis
Perform with IV contrast
Oral and rectal contrast adds little to diagnostic accuracy of CT (and may obscure some findings)
May Consider oral water as contrast if time allows, and is not contraindicated (other
Oral Contrast
is not needed)
Bowel
Injury may be frequently missed on CT
Diaphragm injury or hollow viscus injury may be missed on
CT Abdomen
(despite IV contrast)
Bowel
injuries are rare (1 to 5% of blunt
Trauma
cases), but catastrophic and often occult
Bowel
injury is missed on 20% of blunt
Trauma
(28% of
Penetrating Trauma
)
Bowel
wall breaks are seen on CT in only 10% of bowel wall injuries
Free air is found on CT in only 20% of bowel wall injuries
Other "soft signs" include bowel wall thickening and mesenteric stranding
Serial abdominal exams are a more sensitive marker for exploratory laparotomy indication than CT
Consider repeat CT in 6 hours if non-diagnostic but higher level of suspicion
Free fluid without solid organ source is suspicious for bowel or mesenteric injury
Hounsfield Unit
s (HU) may differentiate cause
Water, urine and
Ascites
are approximately 0 HU
Blood is 30 to 45 HU
CT Findings warranting emergent surgical evaluation (typically exploratory laparotomy)
Bowel
wall
Hematoma
Bowel
wall discontinuity
Oral Contrast
extravasation
Abdominal free air
Metallic fragments in the bowel wall or lumen
References
Brofman (2006) Radiographics 26(4): 1119-1131 [PubMed]
Imaging
Abdominal XRay
Rarely useful beyond demonstrating free air compared with
CT Abdomen
Evaluate with
CT Abdomen and Pelvis
(or UGI with gastrograffin) if red flags are positive
Gene
ral suspicious KUB findings
Peritoneal free air mandates emergent laparoscopy
Ileus
Visceral displacement
Lumbar compression
Fracture
Duodenum or pacreas injury signs
Psoas shadow absent
Retroperitoneal gas
Linear air shadows at duodenum or overlying the right
Kidney
Splenic Injury
signs
Splenic shadow absent
Gastric air bubble displaced medially
Left psoas and left renal shadows obscured
Left upper quadrant soft tissue density
Diagnostics
Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage
(not recommended)
Rarely performed now in United States where
Ultrasound
and CT Scans are readily available
Typically
FAST Exam
followed by
CT Abdomen and Pelvis
is performed in
Trauma
Precautions
Do not delay emergent exploratory laparotomy when indicated
Diagnostic laparascopy misses up to 45% of bowel injuries
Observe all patients following negative laparoscopy
Blunt wound probing may miss peritoneal violation
Consider local wound exploration under sterile conditions
Dissect to base of wound to determine if it penetrates abdominal wall fascia
Intact fascia on exploration reliably excludes penetration
Peritoneal cavity extends well into chest
Anterior superior diaphragm boundary: Nipple Line
Posterior superior diaphragm boundary: 4th intercostal space
Although distracting injury may theoretically hide abdominal findings on exam, it still has 90%
Test Sensitivity
Rostas (2015) J Trauma Acute Care Surg 78(6):1095-100 +PMID:26151507 [PubMed]
Manage secondary conditions
Hemorrhagic Shock
Peritonitis
Broad spectrum
Antibiotic
coverage for intraabdominal infection
Sepsis
management including
Intravenous Fluid
Resuscitation
Management
Emergency Exploratory Laparotomy Indications
Unexplained shock or hemodynamic instability
Visceral
Trauma
(e.g. evisceration)
Gastrointestinal Bleeding
Blood in
Stomach
Blood aspirated via
Nasogastric Tube
Rectal Bleeding
Peritoneal signs or peritonitis on examination
Abdominal Distention
Absent bowel sounds
Suspicious findings on adominal XRay or
CT Abdomen
(e.g. Abdominal free air)
Retained Foreign Body
into the peritoneal cavity
All abdominal gun shot wounds should be surgically explored
Stabbing weapon with peritoneal violation
Prognosis
Morbidity and mortality increases with surgical intervention delayed >5 hours after injury
References
(2012)
ATLS
Manual, 9th ed, American College of Surgeons
Dreis (2020) Crit Dec Emerg Med 34(7):3-21
Calwell and Werner in Herbert (2021) EM:Rap 21(6): 5-6
Smyth (2022) World J Emerg Surg 17(1):13 +PMID: 35246190 [PubMed]
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