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Trauma
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Diagnosis and management of thoracic and abdominal vascular injuries

WL Bif‘

Rhode Island Hospital, Brown Medical School, Providence, Rhode Island, USA, webif-fl{at}usasurg.org

EE Moore

Denver Health Medical Center, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, USA

JM Burch

Denver Health Medical Center, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, USA

Thoracic and abdominal vascular injuries present a formidable challenge to the most experienced surgeon. As prehospital care improves, more patients with these injuries are reaching the hospital alive. Thus, the trauma surgeon must be prepared to deal with them rapidly and precisely. Hemodynamically unstable patients should be transferred directly to the operating room. In stable patients with penetrating thoracic wounds, chest X-ray and arteriography are typically employed to exclude vascular injury. Patients sustaining blunt chest trauma can be screened effectively with CT scanning. Incisions are chosen based on the injured vessel. Hemorrhagic shock is the usual presentation for abdominal vascular trauma. A high index of suspicion is critical in diagnosing occult injuries. This presentation reviews the etiology, diagnosis, and treatment of major thoracic and abdominal vascular injuries.

Key Words: thoracic vascular trauma • aorta • subclavian artery • abdominal vascular trauma • vena cava • iliac artery

Trauma, Vol. 4, No. 2, 105-115 (2002)
DOI: 10.1191/1460408602ta224oa


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