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Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy

Purpose: Current guidelines on urgent thoracotomy of polytraumatized patients are based on data from perforating chest injuries. We aimed to identify predictive factors for urgent thoracotomy after chest-tube placement for blunt chest trauma in a civilian setting. Methods: Polytraumatized patients (...

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Autores principales: Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef, Katthagen, Jan Christoph, Hillemeyer, Thomas, Wiebe, Karsten, Koeppe, Jeanette, Raschke, Michael J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8432076/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34501292
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10173843
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author Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef
Katthagen, Jan Christoph
Hillemeyer, Thomas
Wiebe, Karsten
Koeppe, Jeanette
Raschke, Michael J.
author_facet Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef
Katthagen, Jan Christoph
Hillemeyer, Thomas
Wiebe, Karsten
Koeppe, Jeanette
Raschke, Michael J.
author_sort Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef
collection PubMed
description Purpose: Current guidelines on urgent thoracotomy of polytraumatized patients are based on data from perforating chest injuries. We aimed to identify predictive factors for urgent thoracotomy after chest-tube placement for blunt chest trauma in a civilian setting. Methods: Polytraumatized patients (Injury Severity Score ≥16) with blunt chest trauma, submitted to a level I trauma centre during a period of 12 years that received at least one chest tube were included. Trauma mechanism, chest-tube output, haemoglobin values, need for cellular blood products, coagulopathies, rib fracture pattern, thoracotomy, and mortality were retrospectively analysed. Results: 235 polytraumatized patients were included. Patients that received urgent thoracotomy (UT, n = 10) showed a higher mean chest-tube output within 24 h with a median (Mdn) of 3865 (IQR 2423–5156) mL compared to the group with no additional thoracic surgery (NT, n = 225) with Mdn 185 (IQR 50–463) mL (p < 0.001). The cut-off 24-h chest-tube output value for recommended thoracotomy was 1270 mL (ROC-Curve). UT showed an initial haemoglobin of Mdn 11.7 (IQR 9.2–14.3) g/dL and an INR value of Mdn 1.27 (IQR 1.11–1.69) as opposed to Mdn 12.3 (IQR 10–13.9) g/dL and Mdn 1.13 (IQR 1.05–1.34) in NT (haemoglobin: p = 0.786; INR: p = 0.215). There was an average number of 7.1(±3.4) rib fractures in UT and 6.7(±4.8) in NT (p = 0.649). Conclusions: Chest-tube output remains the single most important predictive factor for urgent thoracotomy also after blunt chest trauma. Patients with a chest-tube output of more than 1300 mL within 24 h after trauma should be considered for transfer to a level I trauma centre with standby thoracic surgery.
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spelling pubmed-84320762021-09-11 Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef Katthagen, Jan Christoph Hillemeyer, Thomas Wiebe, Karsten Koeppe, Jeanette Raschke, Michael J. J Clin Med Article Purpose: Current guidelines on urgent thoracotomy of polytraumatized patients are based on data from perforating chest injuries. We aimed to identify predictive factors for urgent thoracotomy after chest-tube placement for blunt chest trauma in a civilian setting. Methods: Polytraumatized patients (Injury Severity Score ≥16) with blunt chest trauma, submitted to a level I trauma centre during a period of 12 years that received at least one chest tube were included. Trauma mechanism, chest-tube output, haemoglobin values, need for cellular blood products, coagulopathies, rib fracture pattern, thoracotomy, and mortality were retrospectively analysed. Results: 235 polytraumatized patients were included. Patients that received urgent thoracotomy (UT, n = 10) showed a higher mean chest-tube output within 24 h with a median (Mdn) of 3865 (IQR 2423–5156) mL compared to the group with no additional thoracic surgery (NT, n = 225) with Mdn 185 (IQR 50–463) mL (p < 0.001). The cut-off 24-h chest-tube output value for recommended thoracotomy was 1270 mL (ROC-Curve). UT showed an initial haemoglobin of Mdn 11.7 (IQR 9.2–14.3) g/dL and an INR value of Mdn 1.27 (IQR 1.11–1.69) as opposed to Mdn 12.3 (IQR 10–13.9) g/dL and Mdn 1.13 (IQR 1.05–1.34) in NT (haemoglobin: p = 0.786; INR: p = 0.215). There was an average number of 7.1(±3.4) rib fractures in UT and 6.7(±4.8) in NT (p = 0.649). Conclusions: Chest-tube output remains the single most important predictive factor for urgent thoracotomy also after blunt chest trauma. Patients with a chest-tube output of more than 1300 mL within 24 h after trauma should be considered for transfer to a level I trauma centre with standby thoracic surgery. MDPI 2021-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8432076/ /pubmed/34501292 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10173843 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Stolberg-Stolberg, Josef
Katthagen, Jan Christoph
Hillemeyer, Thomas
Wiebe, Karsten
Koeppe, Jeanette
Raschke, Michael J.
Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy
title Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy
title_full Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy
title_fullStr Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy
title_full_unstemmed Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy
title_short Blunt Chest Trauma in Polytraumatized Patients: Predictive Factors for Urgent Thoracotomy
title_sort blunt chest trauma in polytraumatized patients: predictive factors for urgent thoracotomy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8432076/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34501292
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10173843
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