[ccm-l] Re: Pelvic fracture
Stephen Luk
Sluk at harthosp.org
Sat Oct 27 16:18:25 BST 2007
A presentation by Dr. Moore from the Panamerican Trauma Society meeting on Pelvic Packing.
http://www.panamtrauma.org/Lectures/Pelvic%20Retroperitoneal%20Packing%20Related%20to%20Hemorrhage%20by%20Fractures/player.html
Stephen S. Luk, MD, FACS, FCCP
Assistant Professor of Surgery
Associate Director of Trauma
Medical Director, ATOM Course
Hartford Hospital
EMS/Trauma Program
80 Seymour Street
Hartford, CT 06102-5037
(860) 545-3766
sluk at harthosp.org
>>> <KMATTOX at aol.com> 10/27/2007 9:44 AM >>>
In a message dated 10/27/2007 5:39:42 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
hpb.surgery at gmail.com writes:
1. Pelvic fracture + suspected ongoing retro peritoneal venous bleed, what
surgical strategy would you employ?
2. If a rectal tear is suspected, without any perioneal trauma, how would you
de-function, loop colostomy? Or end colostomy and mucous fistula? Would you
try and establish the site of perforation - on-table flexible sigmoidoscopy
etc.?
I agree with Bjorn regarding the excessive fluid administration.
The patient appears to be hemodynamically stable. If unstable, then one
of several tactics to impede ongoing blood loss is indicated. I have never
been totally satisfied with arterial embolization for control of venous
bleeding. I also have not been satisfied with external fixation to reduce blood
loss. The orthopedic community is mixed in its support of external
fixation. The new extra peritoneal packing as reported from Europe and from a
couple of centers in the United States bears watching. I might have
considered such a procedure in this patient. It is a temporizing ("damage control")
tactic.
With the case as you describe, I would consider going to OR for an
examination under anesthesia, looking mainly at the rectum. For this one does not
need to do a flexible sigmoidoscopy, as it is only the rectum which is of
concern. This can be done with a straight short scope. Even a full
thickness injury might be missed, but your CT description is suggestive of a rectal
injury. I would strongly consider a LOOP colostomy, but to be sure that
the distal stoma is totally defunctionalized, unless the patient is obese
and the mesentery is foreshortened and to do a loop would create vascular
compromise to the exteriorized segment. If the patient's pelvis was
operatively repaired, and he did not become febrile, I would study the distal rectum
via the loop colostomy and if NO LEAK, I would consider closing this colostomy
at the first hospitalization.
k
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