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- Fatih Ciftçi, Sadullah Girgin, Ercan Gedik, Serdar Onat, Ibrahim Halil Taçyildiz, and Celalettin Keleş.
- Department of General Surgery, Medicine Faculty of Dicle University, Diyarbakir, Turkey.
- Ulus Travma Acil Cer. 2008 Jul 1; 14 (3): 231-8.
BackgroundPrognostic factors affecting mortality and morbidity in thoracoabdominal injuries were evaluated.MethodsTwo hundred and fifty patients (227 males, 23 females; mean age 30.1+/-5.11; range 15 to 71 years) who had been exposed to thoracoabdominal injuries and underwent laparotomy between June 1996 and November 2005 were investigated retrospectively. Patients were assessed according to age, sex, trauma-operation interval, shock, hospitalization period, number of injured organs, blood transfusion, timing of closed thorax drainage, thoracotomy, Abdominal Trauma Index, Injury Severity Score, Abbreviated Injury Score, Revised Trauma Score, and complications.ResultsMortality and morbidity ratios were 15.6% and 53.5%, respectively. The factors effective on mortality were trauma-operation interval >or=3 hours (p=0.03), presence of shock (p=0.03), increase in the rate of blood transfusion (p=0.001), injured organ number >or=3 (p=0.001), and not performing early-term closed thorax drainage (p=0.005). Trauma-operation interval <3 (p=0.02), increase in the rate of blood transfusion (p=0.02), injured organ number >or=3 (p=0.001), and not performing early-term closed thorax drainage (p=0.005) were the factors effective on morbidity.ConclusionIt was determined that trauma-operation period >or=3 hours, number of injured organs >or=3, and increased number of blood transfusions increased both mortality and morbidity. However, presence of shock increased only mortality. On the other hand, application of closed thorax drainage within a reasonable time period was determined to decrease mortality and morbidity.
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