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The American surgeon · Mar 2009
Alcohol's role on the reliability of clinical examination to rule out pelvic fractures.
- Therèse M Duane, Tracey Dechert, Luke G Wolfe, Holly Brown, Michel B Aboutanos, Ajai K Malhotra, and Rao R Ivatury.
- Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia, USA. tmduane@vcu.edu
- Am Surg. 2009 Mar 1;75(3):257-9.
AbstractThe objective of this study was to determine if clinical examination accurately ruled out pelvic fractures in intoxicated patients sustaining blunt trauma A prospective comparison of intoxicated (blood alcohol level [BAL] greater than 0.08 g/dL) to nonintoxicated (BAL less than 0.08 g/dL) patients sustaining blunt trauma was performed between February 2004 and March 2007. Clinical factors were compared and subset analysis performed in which patients with factors known to compromise the clinical examination were excluded. Two hundred ninety-six intoxicated patients were compared with 1071 nonintoxicated patients. Intoxicated patients were younger and more often male. Intoxicated patients had a higher heart rate (97.1 beats/min +/- 17.9 vs 91.4 beats/min +/- 18.7, P < 0.0001) and lower systolic blood pressure (136.2 mmHg +/- 21.2 vs 141.9 mmHg +/- 26.6, P = 0.0005) than nonintoxicated patients. Intoxicated patients had a lower incidence of pelvic fracture (6.1 vs 10.6%). In subset analysis, the majority of the intoxicated patients did not have exclusion factors on examination and could be evaluated (66.6%). There were eight pelvic fractures diagnosed in this group and no missed injuries on clinical examination (sensitivity 100%). Clinical examination was not compromised by intoxication. Routine pelvic x-rays are not needed in the alert, intoxicated patient sustaining blunt trauma.
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