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No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients

OBJECTIVE: Non-operative management of blunt splenic injury in adults has been applied increasingly at the end of the last century. Therefore, the lifelong risk of overwhelming post-splenectomy infection has been the major impetus for preservation of the spleen. However, the prevalence of posttrauma...

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Autores principales: Heuer, M, Taeger, G, Kaiser, GM, Nast-Kolb, D, Kühne, CA, Ruchholtz, S, Lefering, R, Paul, A, Lendemans, S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3351995/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20696635
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-15-6-258
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author Heuer, M
Taeger, G
Kaiser, GM
Nast-Kolb, D
Kühne, CA
Ruchholtz, S
Lefering, R
Paul, A
Lendemans, S
author_facet Heuer, M
Taeger, G
Kaiser, GM
Nast-Kolb, D
Kühne, CA
Ruchholtz, S
Lefering, R
Paul, A
Lendemans, S
author_sort Heuer, M
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Non-operative management of blunt splenic injury in adults has been applied increasingly at the end of the last century. Therefore, the lifelong risk of overwhelming post-splenectomy infection has been the major impetus for preservation of the spleen. However, the prevalence of posttraumatic infection after splenectomy in contrast to a conservative management is still unknown. Objective was to determine if splenectomy is an independent risk factor for the development of posttraumatic sepsis and multi-organ failure. METHODS: 13,433 patients from 113 hospitals were prospective collected from 1993 to 2005. Patients with an injury severity score > 16, no isolated head injury, primary admission to a trauma center and splenic injury were included. Data were allocated according to the operative management into 2 groups (splenectomy (I) and conservative managed patients (II)). RESULTS: From 1,630 patients with splenic injury 758 patients undergoing splenectomy compared with 872 non-splenectomized patients. 96 (18.3%) of the patients with splenectomy and 102 (18.5%) without splenectomy had apparent infection after operation. Additionally, there was no difference in mortality (24.8% versus 22.2%) in both groups. After massive transfusion of red blood cells (> 10) non-splenectomy patients showed a significant increase of multi-organ failure (46% vs. 40%) and sepsis (38% vs. 25%). CONCLUSIONS: Non-operative management leads to lower systemic infection rates and mortality in adult patients with moderate blunt splenic injury (grade 1-3) and should therefore be advocated. Patients with grade 4 and 5 injury, patients with massive transfusion of red blood cells and unstable patients should be managed operatively.
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spelling pubmed-33519952012-05-16 No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients Heuer, M Taeger, G Kaiser, GM Nast-Kolb, D Kühne, CA Ruchholtz, S Lefering, R Paul, A Lendemans, S Eur J Med Res Research OBJECTIVE: Non-operative management of blunt splenic injury in adults has been applied increasingly at the end of the last century. Therefore, the lifelong risk of overwhelming post-splenectomy infection has been the major impetus for preservation of the spleen. However, the prevalence of posttraumatic infection after splenectomy in contrast to a conservative management is still unknown. Objective was to determine if splenectomy is an independent risk factor for the development of posttraumatic sepsis and multi-organ failure. METHODS: 13,433 patients from 113 hospitals were prospective collected from 1993 to 2005. Patients with an injury severity score > 16, no isolated head injury, primary admission to a trauma center and splenic injury were included. Data were allocated according to the operative management into 2 groups (splenectomy (I) and conservative managed patients (II)). RESULTS: From 1,630 patients with splenic injury 758 patients undergoing splenectomy compared with 872 non-splenectomized patients. 96 (18.3%) of the patients with splenectomy and 102 (18.5%) without splenectomy had apparent infection after operation. Additionally, there was no difference in mortality (24.8% versus 22.2%) in both groups. After massive transfusion of red blood cells (> 10) non-splenectomy patients showed a significant increase of multi-organ failure (46% vs. 40%) and sepsis (38% vs. 25%). CONCLUSIONS: Non-operative management leads to lower systemic infection rates and mortality in adult patients with moderate blunt splenic injury (grade 1-3) and should therefore be advocated. Patients with grade 4 and 5 injury, patients with massive transfusion of red blood cells and unstable patients should be managed operatively. BioMed Central 2010-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3351995/ /pubmed/20696635 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-15-6-258 Text en Copyright ©2010 I. Holzapfel Publishers
spellingShingle Research
Heuer, M
Taeger, G
Kaiser, GM
Nast-Kolb, D
Kühne, CA
Ruchholtz, S
Lefering, R
Paul, A
Lendemans, S
No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients
title No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients
title_full No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients
title_fullStr No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients
title_full_unstemmed No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients
title_short No further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the DGU with 1,630 patients
title_sort no further incidence of sepsis after splenectomy for severe trauma: a multi-institutional experience of the trauma registry of the dgu with 1,630 patients
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3351995/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20696635
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2047-783X-15-6-258
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