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      Laparoscopy in Penetrating Abdominal Trauma

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          Abstract

          If morbidity and mortality are to be reduced in patients with penetrating abdominal trauma, first priority goes to prompt and accurate determination of peritoneal penetration and identification of the need for surgery. In this setting, laparoscopy may have an important impact on the rate of negative or non-therapeutic laparotomies. We analyzed indications and patient selection criteria for laparoscopy in penetrating trauma along with outcomes. The analysis focused on identification of peritoneal penetration and injuries to the diaphragm, small intestine, and mesentery. Results from the early phase of laparoscopy were compared with those from recent decades with more advanced laparoscopic equipment and instruments and more experienced surgeons. A systematic review of the role of laparoscopy in penetrating abdominal trauma shows a sensitivity ranging from 66.7 to 100%, specificity from 33.3 to 100% and accuracy from 50 to 100%. Publications from the 1990s found trauma laparoscopy to be inadequate for detecting intestinal injuries and so to lead to missed injuries. Twenty-three of the 50 studies including the most recent ones report sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 100%. Laparoscopy is more cost effective than negative laparotomy. Laparoscopy can be performed safely and effectively on stable patients with penetrating abdominal trauma. The most important advantages are reduction of morbidity, accuracy in detecting diaphragmatic and intestinal injuries, and elimination of prolonged hospitalization for observation, so reducing the length of stay and increasing cost effectiveness.

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          Most cited references30

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          Practice management guidelines for selective nonoperative management of penetrating abdominal trauma.

          : Although there is no debate that patients with peritonitis or hemodynamic instability should undergo urgent laparotomy after penetrating injury to the abdomen, it is also clear that certain stable patients without peritonitis may be managed without operation. The practice of deciding which patients may not need surgery after penetrating abdominal wounds has been termed selective management. This practice has been readily accepted during the past few decades with regard to abdominal stab wounds; however, controversy persists regarding gunshot wounds. Because of this, the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma Practice Management Guidelines Committee set out to develop guidelines to analyze which patients may be managed safely without laparotomy after penetrating abdominal trauma. A secondary goal of this committee was to find which diagnostic adjuncts are useful in the determination of the need for surgical exploration. : A search of the National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health MEDLINE database was performed using PubMed (www.pubmed.gov). : The search retrieved English language articles concerning selective management of penetrating abdominal trauma and related topics from the years 1960 to 2007. These articles were then used to construct this set of practice management guidelines. : Although the rate of nontherapeutic laparotomies after penetrating wounds to the abdomen should be minimized, this should never be at the expense of a delay in the diagnosis and treatment of injury. With this in mind, a routine laparotomy is not indicated in hemodynamically stable patients with abdominal stab wounds without signs of peritonitis or diffuse abdominal tenderness. Likewise, it is also not routinely indicated in stable patients with abdominal gunshot wounds if the wounds are tangential and there are no peritoneal signs. Abdominopelvic computed tomography should be considered in patients selected for initial nonoperative management to facilitate initial management decisions. The majority of patients with penetrating abdominal trauma managed nonoperatively may be discharged after 24 hours of observation in the presence of a reliable abdominal examination and minimal to no abdominal tenderness. Diagnostic laparoscopy may be considered as a tool to evaluate diaphragmatic lacerations and peritoneal penetration in an effort to avoid unnecessary laparotomy.
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            A critical evaluation of laparoscopy in penetrating abdominal trauma.

            One hundred hemodynamically stable patients with penetrating abdominal trauma (65, stab wounds, 35, gunshot wounds) were evaluated with laparoscopy. Sixty percent of the patients had wounds in the thoracoabdominal area or the upper abdominal quadrants and 25% had injuries located in the lower abdomen and flanks. Fifteen percent had epigastric wounds. Twenty-two stabs and 21 gunshots had not penetrated the peritoneum (negative laparoscopic results). Fifty-seven patients had peritoneal penetration and were noted to have hemoperitoneum only (n = 14), hemoperitoneum and solid organ injuries (n = 23), diaphragmatic lacerations (n = 17), and hollow viscus injuries (n = 2) on laparoscopic examination. Three of the 57 patients, one with omental herniation only and two with low grade nonbleeding lacerations of the liver, were managed uneventfully without laparotomy. The remaining 54 patients underwent laparotomy with confirmation of the laparoscopic findings. Seven patients (three with stab wounds and four with gunshots) had additional GI tract injuries seen at laparotomy. The diagnostic accuracy of laparoscopy was excellent for hemoperitoneum, solid organ injuries, diaphragmatic lacerations, and retroperitoneal hematomas. For GI injuries, laparoscopy was found to have a 100% specificity but only a 18% sensitivity. The majority of these discordant findings occurred in epigastric SWs and flank and lower quadrant GSWs, all in patients with undetected hollow viscus injuries. The major role of laparoscopy in penetrating abdominal trauma is in avoiding unnecessary laparotomy in tangential SWs and GSWs. It is excellent for evaluating the diaphragm in thoracoabdominal wounds. Caution is urged in excluding hollow viscus injuries based on laparoscopy.
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              Selective nonoperative management in 1,856 patients with abdominal gunshot wounds: should routine laparotomy still be the standard of care?

              To evaluate the safety of a policy of selective nonoperative management (SNOM) in patients with abdominal gunshot wounds. Selective nonoperative management is practiced extensively in stab wounds and blunt abdominal trauma, but routine laparotomy is still the standard of care in abdominal gunshot wounds. The authors reviewed the medical records of 1,856 patients with abdominal gunshot wounds (1,405 anterior, 451 posterior) admitted during an 8-year period in a busy academic level 1 trauma center and managed by SNOM. According to this policy, patients who did not have peritonitis, were hemodynamically stable, and had a reliable clinical examination were observed. Initially, 792 (42%) patients (34% of patients with anterior and 68% with posterior abdominal gunshot wounds) were selected for nonoperative management. During observation 80 (4%) patients developed symptoms and required a delayed laparotomy, which revealed organ injuries requiring repair in 57. Five (0.3%) patients suffered complications potentially related to the delay in laparotomy, which were managed successfully. Seven hundred twelve (38%) patients were successfully managed without an operation. The rate of unnecessary laparotomy was 14% among operated patients (or 9% among all patients). If patients were managed by routine laparotomy, the unnecessary laparotomy rate would have been 47% (39% for anterior and 74% for posterior abdominal gunshot wounds). Compared with patients with unnecessary laparotomy, patients managed without surgery had significantly shorter hospital stays and lower hospital charges. By maintaining a policy of SNOM instead of routine laparotomy, a total of 3,560 hospital days and $9,555,752 in hospital charges were saved over the period of the study. Selective nonoperative management is a safe method for managing patients with abdominal gunshot wounds in a level 1 trauma center with an in-house trauma team. It reduces significantly the rate of unnecessary laparotomy and hospital charges.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                World Journal of Surgery
                World J Surg
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0364-2313
                1432-2323
                June 2015
                December 2 2014
                June 2015
                : 39
                : 6
                : 1381-1388
                Article
                10.1007/s00268-014-2904-5
                25446491
                c16c0010-3170-4bea-bc07-0439fa63cbf2
                © 2015

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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