BAT
SJASMD at aol.com
SJASMD at aol.com
Tue Dec 25 06:04:34 GMT 2007
In a message dated 12/25/2007 12:38:41 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
ccrone at charter.net writes:
I work at a small, rural ER (about 18, 000 annual ED volume). We have no
FAST/Ultrasound immediately available at all times. If we have a case of
blunt abdominal trauma & order a CT scan, our radiologist demands that we have
the patient drink oral contrast & wait 2 hours for the CT to be performed. It
then takes another 30 minutes for the report to be obtained. What do other
institutions currently do regarding the use of oral contrast when obtaining
abdominal/pelvic CT's for blunt abdominal trauma in a hemodynamically stable
patient-- with suspected internal injuries?
Thanks
perhaps i am old fashion but i find gastrointestinal opacification
particularly helpful in evanluating the pancreas and duodenum. I think that
opacification small intestind is a hit or miss thing. I don't wait a couple of hours, i
think you can give 300-400 ml of GI contrast at the time of requesting the
scan and top it off with another 300 ml at the time of the scan.
if your radiologist is in house, then a report should be available in 10
minutes. if he or she must drive to the hospital, then they can time it pretty
well from the time the scan STARTS. Of course the availability of teleimaging
should allow your radiologist to read it faster.
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