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- Iain M Smith, Zine K M Beech, Jonathan B Lundy, and Douglas M Bowley.
- *202 (Midlands) Field Hospital, Birmingham, West Midlands, United Kingdom †NIHR Surgical Reconstruction & Microbiology Research Centre, Birmingham, West Midlands, United Kingdom ‡Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, West Midlands, United Kingdom §Army Medical Directorate Support Unit ‖US Army Institute of Surgical Research, Houston, TX.
- Ann. Surg. 2015 Apr 1; 261 (4): 765-73.
ObjectiveThis study describes the cause, management, and outcomes of abdominal injury in a mature deployed military trauma system, with particular focus on damage control, hollow visceral injury (HVI), and stoma utilization.BackgroundDamage control laparotomy (DCL) is established in military and civilian practice. However, optimal management of HVI during military DCL remains controversial.MethodsWe studied abdominal trauma managed over 5 months at the Joint Force Combat Support Hospital, Camp Bastion, Afghanistan (Role 3). Data included demographics, wounding mechanism, injuries sustained, prehospital times, location of first laparotomy (Role 3 or forward), use of DCL or definitive laparotomy, subsequent surgical details, resource utilization, complications, and mortality.ResultsNinety-four of 636 trauma patients (15%) underwent laparotomy. Military injury mechanisms dominated [44 gunshot wounds (47%), 44 blast (47%), and 6 blunt trauma (6%)]. Seventy-two of 94 patients (77%) underwent DCL. Four patients were palliated. Seventy of 94 (74%) sustained HVI; 44 of 70 (63%) had colonic injury. Repair or resection with anastomosis was performed in 59 of 67 therapeutically managed HVI patients (88%). Six patients were managed with fecal diversion, and 6 patients were evacuated with discontinuous bowel. Anastomotic leaks occurred in 4 of 56 HVI patients (7%) with known outcomes. Median New Injury Severity Score for DCL patients was 29 (interquartile range: 18-41) versus 19.5 (interquartile range: 12-34) for patients undergoing definitive laparotomy (P = 0.016). Overall mortality was 15 of 94 (16%).ConclusionsDamage control is now used routinely for battlefield abdominal trauma. In a well-practiced Combat Support Hospital, this strategy is associated with low mortality and infrequent fecal diversion.
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