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Significant trends in the treatment of hepatic trauma. Experience with 411 injuries

Pachter HL; Spencer FC; Hofstetter SR; Liang HG; Coppa GF
Several significant advances in the treatment of hepatic injuries have evolved over the past decade. These trends have been incorporated into the overall treatment strategy of hepatic injuries and are reflected in experiences with 411 consecutive patients. Two hundred fifty-eight patients (63%) with minor injuries (grades I to II) were treated by simple suture or hemostatic agents with a mortality rate of 6%. One hundred twenty-eight patients (31%) sustained complex hepatic injuries (grades III to V). One hundred seven patients (83.5%) with grades III or IV injury underwent portal triad occlusion and finger fracture of hepatic parenchyma alone. Seventy-three surviving patients (73%) required portal triad occlusion, with ischemia times varying from 10 to 75 minutes (mean, 30 minutes). The mortality rate in this group was 6.5% (seven patients) and was accompanied by a morbidity rate of 15%. Fourteen patients (11%) with grade V injury (retrohepatic cava or hepatic veins) were managed by prolonged protal triad occlusion (mean cross-clamp time, 46 minutes) and extensive finger fracture to the site of injury. In four of these patients an atrial caval shunt was additionally used. Two of these patients survived, whereas six of the 10 patients managed without a shunt survived, for an overall mortality rate of 43%. Over the past 4 years, six patients (4.7%) with ongoing coagulopathies were managed by packing and planned re-exploration, with four patients (67%) surviving and one (25%) developing an intra-abdominal abscess. One additional patient (0.8%) was managed by resectional debridement alone and survived. During the past 5 years, 25 hemodynamically stable and alert adult patients (6%) sustaining blunt trauma were evaluated by computed tomography scan and found to have grade I to III injuries. All were managed nonoperatively with uniform success. The combination of portal triad occlusion (up to 75 minutes), finger fracture technique, and the use of a viable omental pack is a safe, reliable, and effective method of managing complex hepatic injuries (grade III to IV). Juxtahepatic venous injuries continue to carry a prohibitive mortality rate, but nonshunting approaches seem to result in the lowest cumulative mortality rate. Packing and planned reexploration has a definitive life-saving role when used adjunctively in the presence of a coagulopathy. Nonoperative management of select hemodynamically stable adult patients, identified by serial computed tomography scans after sustaining blunt trauma is highly successful (95-97%)
PMCID:1242483
PMID: 1616386
ISSN: 0003-4932
CID: 13603

The morbidity and financial impact of colostomy closure in trauma patients

Pachter HL; Hoballah JJ; Corcoran TA; Hofstetter SR
During a 10-year period, 87 patients who had undergone elective colostomy closure at Bellevue Hospital were retrospectively reviewed in order to evaluate the morbidity of colostomy closure after traumatic injury and its financial impact. Sixty-two per cent of the colostomies were in the left colon and 38% were right sided. The interval from the original injury to colostomy takedown varied from 20 to 465 days, with a mean of 144 days. The mean postoperative hospital stay for the entire group was 15.13 days at a cost of $13,995. There were no deaths and no anastomotic leaks in the entire series, but a morbidity rate of 25% ensued. Small bowel obstruction was the most frequent significant complication, occurring in ten patients (11.5%) and resulting in a prolongation of hospital stay by 7 days at an additional cost of $6,500 per patient. One additional patient developed a subphrenic abscess which required operative drainage, necessitating an additional 24 days in the hospital at an increased cost of $22,200. Other complications which did not prolong hospital stay included eight superficial wound infections, one transient respiratory failure, and two patients who returned at a later date with incisional hernias at the stoma site. The 25% morbidity encountered in this series suggests that colostomy closure is not a low-morbidity procedure and should be considered as an important factor favoring primary repair. Coupled with the significant financial impact of both colostomy formation and takedown, ample justification exists for greater efforts in avoiding colostomy formation whenever feasible
PMID: 2258963
ISSN: 0022-5282
CID: 59991

Experience with selective operative and nonoperative treatment of splenic injuries in 193 patients

Pachter HL; Spencer FC; Hofstetter SR; Liang HG; Hoballah J; Coppa GF
During the past decade splenic salvage procedures rather than splenectomy have been considered the preferred treatment for traumatic splenic injuries. Splenic preservation has been most often accomplished by splenorrhaphy and more recently by a controversial nonoperative approach. This report delineates indications, contraindications, and results with splenectomy, splenorrhaphy, and nonoperative treatment based on an 11-year experience (1978 to 1989) in which 193 consecutive adult patients with splenic injuries were treated. One hundred sixty-seven patients (86.5%) underwent urgent operation. Of these, 111 (66%) were treated by splenorrhaphy or partial splenectomy and 56 (34%) were treated by splenectomy. During the last 4 years, 26 additional patients (13.5%) were managed without operation. Patients considered for nonoperative treatment were alert, hemodynamically stable with computed tomographic evidence of isolated grades I to III splenic injuries. Overall 24% of the injuries resulted from penetrating trauma, whereas 76% of the patients sustained blunt injuries. Complications were rare, with two patients in the splenorrhaphy group experiencing re-bleeding (1.8%) and one patient (4%) failing nonoperative treatment. The mortality rate for the entire group was 4%. This report documents that splenorrhaphy can safely be performed in 65% to 75% of splenic injuries. Splenectomy is indicated for more extensive injuries or when patients are hemodynamically unstable in the presence of life-threatening injuries. Nonoperative therapy can be accomplished safely in a small select group (15% to 20%), with a success rate of nearly 90% if strict criteria for selection are met
PMCID:1358228
PMID: 2339919
ISSN: 0003-4932
CID: 46464

Traumatic injuries to the pancreas: the role of distal pancreatectomy with splenic preservation

Pachter HL; Hofstetter SR; Liang HG; Hoballah J
PMID: 2681807
ISSN: 0022-5282
CID: 10473

Adult intussusception in association with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome and intestinal Kaposi's sarcoma [Case Report]

Hofstetter SR; Stollman N
Visceral Kaposi's sarcoma is a common manifestation of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Most lesions are clinically silent, detected only by radiographic or endoscopic studies. We report the first instance of AIDS-related jejunal Kaposi's sarcoma presenting with small intestinal obstruction due to intussusception. Gastrointestinal Kaposi's sarcoma is a clinical problem that may occur more frequently in the future
PMID: 3189268
ISSN: 0002-9270
CID: 10901

The management of juxtahepatic venous injuries without an atriocaval shunt: preliminary clinical observations

Pachter HL; Spencer FC; Hofstetter SR; Liang HC; Coppa GF
Juxtahepatic venous injuries are usually fatal. The optimal method of dealing with these injuries remains controversial, but most experience has been with the insertion of an atriocaval shunt. However, the mortality rate with atriocaval shunting remains prohibitively high (60% to 100%). The experience at the Bellevue Hospital Trauma and Shock Unit during a 9-year period revealed a 50% mortality rate in four consecutive patients who underwent atriocaval shunting. As such, a different approach was used in the following five patients, all of whom survived. One additional patient died in the operating room before any definitive repair could be undertaken. Four steps are considered essential to the successful management of these patients: (1) compression of the injury site until adequate resuscitation has been achieved; (2) early recognition that a juxtahepatic venous injury exists, as indicated by failure of the Pringle maneuver to adequately arrest hemorrhage; (3) prolonged portal triad occlusion with hepatocyte protection by means of large doses of steroids and topical hypothermia (portal triad occlusion time in the nonshunted group ranged from 20 to 64 minutes with a mean occlusion time of 46 minutes; although a transient rise in liver function test results seemed to correlate with the length of ischemia time, neither hepatic dysfunction nor hepatic necrosis occurred; and (4) extensive finger fracture of the liver to the site of vascular injury for primary repair or ligation; the extent of the finger fracture varied from 15 to 30 cm in length and from 5 to 15 cm in depth. The successful results achieved in five consecutive patients who sustained juxtahepatic venous injuries treated without a shunt serve as a basis for recommending this operative approach
PMID: 3518106
ISSN: 0039-6060
CID: 59995

Management of penetrating wounds of the back and flank

Coppa GF; Davalle M; Pachter HL; Hofstetter SR
The results of a retrospective and prospective study of patients with penetrating wounds of the back and flank showed that physical examination alone was accurate in 72 and 83 per cent, respectively. The inaccuracy was primarily due to false-negative examinations. The most commonly injured organs were the liver and kidney. The presence of gross hematuria and intravenous pyelography proved to have an accuracy rate of 95 per cent in patients studied prospectively. Peritoneal lavage, although similarly accurate (95 per cent), was associated with a 10 per cent false-negative result when the wound was located in the back. Guidelines for the management of these patients include hospital admission, careful physical examination, urinalysis by dipstick and cell count, intravenous pyelography and peritoneal lavage. Initial hypotension usually is associated with visceral injury and is an indication for exploratory laparotomy. Strict adherence to these guidelines was associated with a negative exploration rate of less than 10 per cent and a decrease in the number of patients observed with visceral injury from 50 to 6 per cent
PMID: 6505937
ISSN: 0039-6087
CID: 59996

Computed tomography in localization of foreign bodies lodged in the extremities [Case Report]

Firooznia H; Bjorkengren A; Hofstetter SR; Rafii M; Golimbu C
Surgical removal of foreign objects (FO) lodged in the body may be difficult because of uncertain 3-dimensional localization on conventional roentgenograms. Furthermore, low-density FO may not be detectable on roentgenograms. CT was performed in 8 patients with FO lodged in the extremities, and was found helpful because, (1) it detected 4 low-density FO's missed on roentgenograms, and (2) it facilitated surgical removal by displaying the precise 3-dimensional location of these objects
PMID: 6478814
ISSN: 0730-4862
CID: 29078

A prospective comparison of two regimens of prophylactic antibiotics in abdominal trauma: cefoxitin versus triple drug

Hofstetter SR; Pachter HL; Bailey AA; Coppa GF
To determine the best antibiotic regimen to employ in patients undergoing laparotomy for trauma, a randomized prospective study was designed comparing cefoxitin alone with a triple-drug regime of an aminoglycoside, ampicillin, and clindamycin. One hundred nineteen consecutive patients sustaining abdominal trauma (97 penetrating; 22 blunt) were divided by date of admission to a 24-hour course of antibiotics. The overall infection rate was 16.0%, with 14.5% of the cefoxitin-treated patients, and 18.0% of the triple-drug-treated patients developing an infectious complication. Excluding remote site infections, the abdominal wound and intraperitoneal infection rates were 13.0% for cefoxitin-treated patients, and 12.0% for triple-drug-treated patients. There was one instance of oliguric renal failure questionably related to an aminoglycoside. It is concluded that a 24-hour course of cefoxitin is a safe and effective prophylactic antibiotic regime in patients undergoing laparotomy for trauma
PMID: 6368855
ISSN: 0022-5282
CID: 59997

Experience with the finger fracture technique to achieve intra-hepatic hemostasis in 75 patients with severe injuries of the liver

Pachter HL; Spencer FC; Hofstetter SR; Coppa GF
The most important concept emerging from the management of complex hepatic trauma is that direct suture ligation of severed blood vessels and bile ducts is the most effective treatment. Three essential maneuvers are necessary: (1) the use of the finger fracture technique to expose the laceration widely, so that individual ligation of severed blood vessels and bile ducts can be accomplished under direct vision; (2) occluding the portal triad for 20 to 60 minutes; (3) closure of the hepatic incision over a viable omental pedicle. Two hundred consecutive patients with hepatic injuries were treated at the Trauma and Shock Unit of Bellevue Hospital between July 1976 and January 1982. One hundred and twenty-five injuries (63%) could be managed by superficial suture and drainage alone; 75 (37%) more extensive injuries required additional therapy; 47 of the 75 injuries required inflow occlusion for periods of up to 60 minutes, with the mean occlusion time of 30 minutes. All patients were pretreated with 30 to 40 mg/kg of Solu-Medrol prior to cross-clamping the portal triad. In addition, the liver was cooled to 27-32 degrees C topically by pouring 1 liter of iced Ringer's lactate directly on the liver surface, monitoring the temperature with an intra-hepatic probe. Ischemia time exceeded 20 minutes in 70%, 30 minutes in 40% and 60 minutes in 7% of patients. This approach, with complex hepatic trauma, has been dramatically effective. There were only four deaths (5.3%). One (1.3%) patient required reoperation for bleeding; three patients (4%) developed perihepatic abscesses; and two patients (3%) developed biliary fistulae that spontaneously closed. An extended right hepatectomy was necessary in the one patient who required reoperation for bleeding. This represents the only case of a formal hepatic resection in this series. Hepatic artery ligation was not employed in any case. These experiences strongly endorse the direct approach to the treatment of major hepatic lacerations by opening a lacerated liver sufficiently to ligate lacerated blood vessels and bile ducts, followed by closure over an omental pedicle. The wide-spread adoption of this technique will probably lower the mortality from massive liver injuries to 5-10%
PMCID:1352914
PMID: 6344818
ISSN: 0003-4932
CID: 59998