1. The Role of Angioembolization in Liver Trauma: the 10-Year Retrospective Experience of a Level One Trauma Center
- Author
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Asaf Kedar, Gideon Zamir, Allan I. Bloom, Gabriel Szydlo, Sadi A. Abukhalaf, Bala Miklosh, Abed Khalaileh, Alon J. Pikarsky, Harbi Khalayleh, Ashraf Imam, and Samir Abu-Gazala
- Subjects
Liver injury ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Exploratory laparotomy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Trauma center ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cardiothoracic surgery ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Laparotomy ,Pediatric surgery ,medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Embolization ,business ,Complication - Abstract
The role of angioembolization in managing hemodynamically stable patients with liver injury has obviated the need for surgery. Although mortality and morbidity rates after the adoption of this technique have decreased, this procedure is not devoid of complications. This study assesses the impact of this procedure and its associated complications. We performed a case series analysis of patients with hepatic trauma in a level one trauma center over 10 years (2008โ2017). Data were collected from hospital records of patients with liver injury and analyzed according to demographics, injury type, management strategy, procedure time, efficacy, complications of embolization, and outcome. We included all patients who underwent angioembolization. Patients who underwent surgery only or had incomplete records were excluded. Of 366 patients with liver trauma, eighteen were managed with angioembolization. Of which, thirteen had grade IV injury or higher, while five had grade II or III. Twelve patients had blunt liver trauma. Six patients were initially managed by laparotomy followed by angioembolization. The most common embolized artery was the right hepatic artery (eleven patients). Nine patients had at least one complication after the procedure. The liver collection was the most common complication (seven patients). There was one hepatic complication-related death. Morbidity was more common in patients who underwent exploratory laparotomy before angioembolization compared to angioembolization alone. Those who had a laparotomy before the angioembolization may have a higher complication rate.
- Published
- 2021
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