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Blunt Traumatic Abdominal Wall Hernias: An Indicator for Emergent Laparotomy?

Authors :
Adora T. Santos
Olivia Jagiella-Lodise
Phillip Kim
Mari E. Freedberg
Randi N. Smith
Jonathan Nguyen
M. Andrew Davis
Patricia Ayoung-Chee
S. Rob Todd
Elizabeth R. Benjamin
Jason D. Sciarretta
Source :
The American Surgeon™. :000313482311724
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2023.

Abstract

Background Traumatic abdominal wall hernias (TAWH) are relatively uncommon; however, the shearing force that results in fascial disruption could indicate an increased risk of visceral injury. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether the presence of a TAWH was associated with intra-abdominal injury requiring emergent laparotomy. Methods The trauma registry was queried over an 8-year period (7/2012-7/2020) for adult patients with blunt thoracoabdominal trauma diagnosed with a TAWH. Those patients who were identified with a TAWH and greater than 15 years of age were included in the study. Demographics, mechanism of injury, ISS, BMI, length of stay, TAWH size, type of TAWH repair, and outcomes were analyzed. Results Overall, 38,749 trauma patients were admitted over the study period, of which 64 (.17%) had a TAWH. Patients were commonly male (n = 42, 65.6%); the median age was 39 years (range 16-79 years) and a mean ISS of 21. Twenty-eight percent had a clinical seatbelt sign. Twenty-seven (42.2%) went emergently to the operating room, the majority for perforated viscus requiring bowel resection (n = 16, 25.0%), and 6 patients (9.4%) who were initially managed nonoperatively underwent delayed laparotomy. Average ventilator days was 14 days, with a mean ICU LOS of 14 days and mean hospital LOS of 18 days. About half of the hernias were repaired at the index operation, 6 of which were repaired primarily and 10 with mesh. Conclusion The presence of a TAWH alone was an indication for immediate laparotomy to evaluate for intra-abdominal injury. In the absence of other indications for exploration, nonoperative management may be safe.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
15559823 and 00031348
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Surgeon™
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d7cdfb33a9f372d2659bb74c703659ea