• AJR Am J Roentgenol · Jan 1996

    Detection of bleeding in patients with major pelvic fractures: value of contrast-enhanced CT.

    • D S Cerva, S E Mirvis, K Shanmuganathan, I M Kelly, and S O Pais.
    • Department of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Maryland Medical System, Baltimore 21201, USA.
    • AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1996 Jan 1;166(1):131-5.

    ObjectiveWe performed a retrospective review of trauma patients who had undergone both pelvic angiography and preangiographic i.v. contrast-enhanced CT to determine whether CT can accurately demonstrate the presence or absence of pelvic bleeding in patients with multisystem trauma and major pelvic fractures.Subjects And MethodsWe reviewed the medical records and imaging studies of all patients, identified through a trauma radiology database, who had undergone pelvic angiography and preangiographic contrast-enhanced CT during a 48-month period. Results of CT scans were recorded by consensus interpretation of three radiologists without knowledge of angiographic findings. Sites of contrast material extravasation seen on CT scans were noted and compared with sites of bleeding or vascular injury identified by selective pelvic angiography.ResultsThirty patients with blunt trauma and pelvic fractures underwent both pelvic angiography and preangiographic CT studies. Findings on pelvic angiograms were positive at 26 sites in 19 patients and included contrast agent extravasation at 23 sites and vessel abnormalities without extravasation at three sites. Preangiographic pelvic CT scans showed contrast agent extravasation at 20 sites in 16 patients. Three patients had no contrast agent extravasation demonstrated by CT but had bleeding demonstrated by angiography. CT detected bleeding in 16 of 19 patients who had extravasation or vascular injury demonstrated by angiography, for a sensitivity of 84%. Results of pelvic angiography were negative in 11 patients, and none had evidence of bleeding on preangiographic CT scans. Two sites of contrast agent extravasation identified in two patients by CT did not show bleeding at angiography, for a specificity of 85% for the detection of bleeding. The overall accuracy of CT for determining the presence or absence of bleeding was 90%.ConclusionKnowledge of sites of ongoing hemorrhage is crucial for optimizing the sequence of diagnostic and therapeutic studies in patients with blunt trauma. Contrast-enhanced CT of the pelvis, which is often performed for hemodynamically stable trauma patients, is a noninvasive technique that is highly accurate in determining the presence or absence of ongoing pelvic hemorrhage. This information can assist in initial management decisions involving patients with multisystem trauma and major pelvic fractures.

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