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- Michael W Parra, Carlos A Ordoñez, Luis Fernando Pino, Mauricio Millán, Yaset Caicedo, Víctor Rafael Buchelli, Alberto García, Adolfo González-Hadad, Alexander Salcedo, José Julián Serna, Laureano Quintero, Mario Alain Herrera, Fabian Hernández, and Fernando Rodríguez-Holguín.
- Broward General Level I Trauma Center, Department of Trauma Critical Care, Fort Lauderdale, FL - USA.
- Colomb Medica. 2021 Apr 1; 52 (2): e4054611.
AbstractThoracic vascular trauma is associated with high mortality and is the second most common cause of death in patients with trauma following head injuries. Less than 25% of patients with a thoracic vascular injury arrive alive to the hospital and more than 50% die within the first 24 hours. Thoracic trauma with the involvement of the great vessels is a surgical challenge due to the complex and restricted anatomy of these structures and its association with adjacent organ damage. This article aims to delineate the experience obtained in the surgical management of thoracic vascular injuries via the creation of a practical algorithm that includes basic principles of damage control surgery. We have been able to show that the early application of a resuscitative median sternotomy together with a zone 1 resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) in hemodynamically unstable patients with thoracic outlet vascular injuries improves survival by providing rapid stabilization of central aortic pressure and serving as a bridge to hemorrhage control. Damage control surgery principles should also be implemented when indicated, followed by definitive repair once the correction of the lethal diamond has been achieved. To this end, we have developed a six-step management algorithm that illustrates the surgical care of patients with thoracic outlet vascular injuries according to the American Association of the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) classification.Copyright © 2021 Colombia Medica.
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