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La Radiologia medica · Jul 2000
[The radiological diagnostic and clinical approach to the patient with stab and cut wounds of the chest. The authors' personal experience].
- A Salzano, A De Rosa, E Rossi, V Nocera, M Carbone, G Gatta, S Romano, and R Grassi.
- Servizio di Radiologia, Ospedale San Giovanni di Dio di Frattamaggiore, ASL NA 3, Napoli. antoniosalzano@libero.it
- Radiol Med. 2000 Jul 1;100(1-2):24-8.
PurposeTo report our personal experience with the clinical and radiological diagnostic approach to stab and cut wounds of the thoracic cage and its content, a type of injury whose diagnosis and treatment, as well as the surgical approach, vary case by case. CT of deep penetrating wounds permits correct assessment of severe changes such as pneumothorax, hemothorax and pneumomediastinum.Material And MethodsIn the last three years we examined 57 patients (48 men and 9 women; mean age 34 years, range 16-54): chest radiography was performed in 51 of them, with orthogonal projections in the standing and sitting positions. Chest CT was performed in emergency with i.v. contrast agent injection, with scans from the midneck to the diaphragm insertion to study border regions. Thoracostomy with pleural drainage was performed in 35 patients with pneumothorax and hemothorax while thoracotomy was performed in 8 patients, namely 4 with injury to the diaphragm, 2 to the heart, 1 with tear of the main bronchial artery and 1 of the aortic arch.ResultsThe most frequent symptoms we found were chest pain (100% of cases) and dyspnea (84%); laboratory data showed anemia and decreased hematocrit levels in 28 cases. Chest radiography was negative in 14 cases. The patients were then examined with CT to exclude radiographic underestimation of minimal pneumothorax, small lacerocontusive or hemorrhagic foci and hemothorax, which were observed in 4, 2 and one cases, respectively, and where radiography was actually negative for traumatic changes. Chest radiography was positive in 43 cases: the most frequent finding was pneumothorax, with 37 cases (86%)--8 of them associated with hemothorax and 5 with pneumomediastinum. Lacero-hemorrhagic foci of lung parenchyma were found in 5 cases and single pulmonary hematoma from punch crossing was seen in 1 case.Discussion And ConclusionsCT was an accurate tool and had higher sensitivity than chest radiography in detecting and detailing pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum and lacero-hemorrhagic foci, as well as in quantifying hemothorax. Chest radiography had 12% false negatives and therefore we decided to perform CT in all the patients with penetrating wounds to prevent radiographic underestimation. Given the low rate of false negatives (7/57 cases) CT might appear superfluous but since in 2 of these 7 cases we had massive pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum associated with neck emphysema we suggest its use to prevent complications, clinical failures and medicolegal problems. CT permits correct assessment of penetrating stab and cut wounds of the chest and efficient and targeted treatment, which can be conservative, with thoracostomy with pleural drainage, or surgical.
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