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[Update polytrauma and computed tomography in ongoing resuscitation : ABCDE and "diagnose first what kills first"].

Authors :
Gäble A
Hebebrand J
Armbruster M
Mück F
Berndt M
Kumle B
Fink U
Wirth S
Source :
Der Radiologe [Radiologe] 2020 Mar; Vol. 60 (3), pp. 247-257.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Clinical Issue: The mean number of trauma room admissions and applied CT dose increase as the severity of injuries decreases. Therefore, appropriateness of established procedures should be re-evaluated.<br />Standard Radiological Methods: Considering severely injured patients with an Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≥16, whole body CT (WB-CT) compared to selective CT decreased mortality by about 25%. Thus, the ISS is a good indicator for the severity of injuries. However, since ISS can only be determined after diagnosis, it does not help with the primary assessment.<br />Methodological Innovation and Evaluation: In addition to the currently used very fast WB-CT protocol with the highest diagnostic precision, a second protocol should be established applying a substantially lower dose. Under ongoing resuscitation, WB-CT often makes a substantial contribution towards targeted therapy or to justifying the discontinuation of resuscitation measures. The WB-CT findings should be performed several times and, at least in the acute emergency situation, it should follow the ABCDE scheme as close as possible.<br />Practical Recommendations: In the trauma room it should be initially decided whether the classification as polytrauma is to be maintained. If yes, every institution should provide a dose-reduced WB-CT protocol in addition to the maximum variant used so far. Dose-reduced WB-CT seems to be appropriate for stable and oriented patients, who receive a CT primarily because of the trauma mechanism. Even under resuscitation conditions, WB-CT is easy to perform and medically as well as ethically of high value. The reporting and communication should be structured according to "diagnose first what kills first".

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
1432-2102
Volume :
60
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Der Radiologe
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31925467
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00117-019-00633-w