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Comparison of Clinical Characteristics, Therapy, and Short-Term Prognosis between Blunt and Penetrating Abdominal Trauma: A Multicentric Retrospective Cohort Study

Authors :
Yi Liu
Yunhe Gao
Zhida Chen
Jianxin Cui
Wenquan Liang
Ze Wang
Linde Sun
Chuan Pang
Yuan Lv
Guoxiao Liu
Tingting Lu
Gan Zhang
Xiaoyu Dong
Hong Xu
Sheng Yao
Feng Liang
Gang Liu
Gang Chen
Jianmiao He
Wentong Xu
Bo Wei
Hongqing Xi
Lin Chen
Source :
Emergency Medicine International, Vol 2024 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Wiley, 2024.

Abstract

Objective. Large-scale studies on the characteristics and management of abdominal trauma in megacities in China are lacking. The aim of this study was to analyze and present the clinical patterns and treatment status of abdominal trauma in regional medical centers. Methods. Cases of abdominal trauma treated at seven medical centers in Beijing from 2010 to 2021 were collected. Clinical information about age, sex, injury cause, geographic distribution, abbreviated injury scale/injury severity score (AIS/ISS) value, injury-hospital time, preoperative time, surgically identified organ injuries, type of surgery, causes of reoperation and 90-day mortality was included in this study. Clinical characteristics, treatment methods, and short-term prognoses (90-days survival) were compared between blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) and penetrating abdominal trauma (PAT) cases. Non-normally distributed data are described as medians (IQR), and the Mann‒Whitney U test was performed; qualitative data were analyzed using the X2 test. Univariate and multivariate survival analyses were performed by the Cox proportional hazards model. Results. A total of 553 patients (86.98% male) with a median age of 36.50 (27.00–48.00) years were included. The BAT group had a significantly higher proportion of serious injury (P=0.001), lower initial hemoglobin level (P=0.001), and a lower laparoscopy surgery rate (P=0.044) compared to the PAT group. Additionally, more BAT cases were from the area around Beijing (P=0.008) and a longer injury-regional hospital time (10.47 (5.18–22.51) hours vs. 7.00 (3.80–15.38) hours, P=0.001). In the hollow viscus injury subgroup, the BAT group had a significantly longer injury-regional hospital time and preoperative time compared to the PAT group (injury-regional hospital time: 10.23 (6.00–21.59) hours vs. 7.07 (3.99–13.85) hours, P=0.002; preoperative time: 3.02 (2.01–5.58) hours vs. 2.81 (1.85–3.63) hours, P=0.047). The overall 90-day mortality was 11.9%, and longer injury-regional hospital time (HR: 1.01, 95% CI: 1.00–1.02, P=0.008), receipt of ICU treatment (HR: 4.69, 95% CI: 2.54–8.65, P=0.001), and severe ISSs (ISS > 25 vs. ISS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20902859
Volume :
2024
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Emergency Medicine International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8630746d541efbda399965a2e8bf0
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2024/5215977