-
Multicenter Study
Successful nonoperative management of the most severe blunt liver injuries: a multicenter study of the research consortium of new England centers for trauma.
- Gwendolyn M van der Wilden, George C Velmahos, Timothy Emhoff, Samielle Brancato, Charles Adams, Georgios Georgakis, Lenworth Jacobs, Ronald Gross, Suresh Agarwal, Peter Burke, Adrian A Maung, Dirk C Johnson, Robert Winchell, Jonathan Gates, Walter Cholewczynski, Michael Rosenblatt, and Yuchiao Chang.
- Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma, Emergency Surgery, and Surgical Critical Care, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
- Arch Surg. 2012 May 1;147(5):423-8.
HypothesisGrade 4 and grade 5 blunt liver injuries can be safely treated by nonoperative management (NOM).DesignRetrospective case series.SettingEleven level I and level II trauma centers in New England.PatientsThree hundred ninety-three adult patients with grade 4 or grade 5 blunt liver injury who were admitted between January 1, 2000, and January 31, 2010.Main Outcome MeasureFailure of NOM (f-NOM), defined as the need for a delayed operation.ResultsOne hundred thirty-one patients (33.3%) were operated on immediately, typically because of hemodynamic instability. Among 262 patients (66.7%) who were offered a trial of NOM, treatment failed in 23 patients (8.8%) (attributed to the liver in 17, with recurrent liver bleeding in 7 patients and biliary peritonitis in 10 patients). Multivariate analysis identified the following 2 independent predictors of f-NOM: systolic blood pressure on admission of 100 mm Hg or less and the presence of other abdominal organ injury. Failure of NOM was observed in 23% of patients with both independent predictors and in 4% of those with neither of the 2 independent predictors. No patients in the f-NOM group experienced life-threatening events because of f-NOM, and mortality was similar between patients with successful NOM (5.4%) and patients with f-NOM (8.7%) (P = .52). Among patients with successful NOM, liver-specific complications developed in 10.0% and were managed definitively without major sequelae.ConclusionsNonoperative management was offered safely in two-thirds of grade 4 and grade 5 blunt liver injuries, with a 91.3% success rate. Only 6.5% of patients with NOM required a delayed operation because of liver-specific issues, and none experienced life-threatening complications because of the delay.
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