the modern spleen
Ronald Simon
Traumamd at nyc.rr.com
Thu Jun 7 16:47:48 BST 2007
Agree with all of what pat said
ron simon
Offner, Patrick wrote:
> Reactive pleural effusions and fever are very common with this scenario.
> I would continue to watch very closely. Missed bowel injury has to be in
> the back of your mind. In my experience, splenic infarction is unusual
> with main splenic artery embo(but have seen several--including
> abscess--after distal embo). Don't believe in prophylactic antibiotics
> in this situation--no data.
>
> pat
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org
> [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of caesar ursic
> Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 6:49 AM
> To: Trauma &, Critical Care mailing list
> Subject: Re: the modern spleen
>
> ok, I was thinking as were all of you. There was a large albeit subtle
> 'blush' on the lateral edge of the injured spleen prior to embolization,
> so we were thinking that the whole 'raw' edge of the broken spleen was
> still oozing. The radiologists coiled the main splenic artery, as there
> were no obvious segmental arterial branches that we could attribute as
> the main
> supply to the bleeding area. He inserted about five coils. Patient
> remain
> hemodynamically normal throughout the whole ordeal.
>
> it is now three hours after presentation to ER, nearly 24 hours since
> the injury.
>
> Admitted to ICU with Foley catheter; NPO; I did immunize him with
> pneumovax at that point (I'm a pessimist by nature). Serial Hb ordered
> every six hours initially, then less frequently. Here's the Hb trend
> (in g/dL):
>
> admission: 13.9; six hours: 11.9, twelve hours: 11.3 eighteen hours:
> 10.5 twenty-four hours: 9.5; thirty hours: 9.1 thirty eight hours: 9.3;
> forty eight hours: 9.1; morning of day five: 9.2 His BP and heart rate
> remain normal all the time. His urine output always at or above
> 0.5cc/kg/hr.
>
> abdominal exam: slowly improving (slower than I would like): he's quits
> asking for narcotics by day two; starts passing flatus again by day
> three (I move him out if ICU at that point); hungry again by day four,
> starts to eat.
>
> other fun stuff: his oxygen saturations are slowly dropping on room
> air. A chest x ray on day four shows a significant (maybe one-third)
> left pleural effusion. The admission CXR was stone-cold normal, and CT
> cuts (on
> admission) through the lower thorax showed no fluid/consolidation
> whatsoever. Reactive pleural effusion? Drain it or let it be and wait
> for
> it to reabsorb? He is now requiring 4 L/min by nasal cannula to
> maintain
> spO2 of 93%. Not really dyspneic, but not really moving around much
> either. Elevation at my hospital in Santa Fe is 7,000 feet (2,100
> meters).
>
> Oh, and now he's spiking temps to 40 C. WBC count remains slightly
> elevated at 14,000 (down from 17,000 on admission). Urinalysis is
> clean. No IV site infections. The angiographer had originally insisted
> that we give him prophylactic antibiotics prior to the embolization (for
> one week) to 'cover'
> for splenic infarction and splenic abscess formation. I didn't. Should
> I have? Should I start antibiotics now? Blood cultures are pending.
>
> Patient knows he won't be playing football this fall (I told him so) but
> wants to play basketball starting January.
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