TY - JOUR
T1 - Damage control in penetrating cardiac trauma
AU - González-Hadad, Adolfo
AU - Ordoñez, Carlos A.
AU - Parra, Michael W.
AU - Caicedo, Yaset
AU - Padilla, Natalia
AU - Millán, Mauricio
AU - García, Alberto
AU - Vidal-Carpio, Jenny Marcela
AU - Pino, Luis Fernando
AU - Herrera, Mario Alain
AU - Quintero, Laureano
AU - Hernández, Fabian
AU - Flórez, Guillermo
AU - Rodríguez-Holguín, Fernando
AU - Salcedo, Alexander
AU - Serna, José Julián
AU - Franco, María Josefa
AU - Ferrada, Ricardo
AU - Navsaria, Pradeep H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Facultad de Salud de la Universidad del Valle. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Definitive management of hemodynamically stable patients with penetrating cardiac injuries remains controversial between those who propose aggressive invasive care versus those who opt for a less invasive or non-operative approach. This controversy even extends to cases of hemodynamically unstable patients in which damage control surgery is thought to be useful and effective. The aim of this article is to delineate our experience in the surgical management of penetrating cardiac injuries via the creation of a clear and practical algorithm that includes basic principles of damage control surgery. We recommend that all patients with precordial penetrating injuries undergo trans-thoracic ultrasound screening as an integral component of their initial evaluation. In those patients who arrive hemodynamically stable but have a positive ultrasound, a pericardial window with lavage and drainage should follow. We want to emphasize the importance of the pericardial lavage and drainage in the surgical management algorithm of these patients. Before this concept, all positive pericardial windows ended up in an open chest exploration. With the coming of the pericardial lavage and drainage procedure, the reported literature and our experience have shown that 25% of positive pericardial windows do not benefit and/or require further invasive procedures. However, in hemodynamically unstable patients, damage control surgery may still be required to control ongoing bleeding. For this purpose, we propose a surgical management algorithm that includes all of these essential clinical aspects in the care of these patients.
AB - Definitive management of hemodynamically stable patients with penetrating cardiac injuries remains controversial between those who propose aggressive invasive care versus those who opt for a less invasive or non-operative approach. This controversy even extends to cases of hemodynamically unstable patients in which damage control surgery is thought to be useful and effective. The aim of this article is to delineate our experience in the surgical management of penetrating cardiac injuries via the creation of a clear and practical algorithm that includes basic principles of damage control surgery. We recommend that all patients with precordial penetrating injuries undergo trans-thoracic ultrasound screening as an integral component of their initial evaluation. In those patients who arrive hemodynamically stable but have a positive ultrasound, a pericardial window with lavage and drainage should follow. We want to emphasize the importance of the pericardial lavage and drainage in the surgical management algorithm of these patients. Before this concept, all positive pericardial windows ended up in an open chest exploration. With the coming of the pericardial lavage and drainage procedure, the reported literature and our experience have shown that 25% of positive pericardial windows do not benefit and/or require further invasive procedures. However, in hemodynamically unstable patients, damage control surgery may still be required to control ongoing bleeding. For this purpose, we propose a surgical management algorithm that includes all of these essential clinical aspects in the care of these patients.
KW - Advanced trauma life support care
KW - Cardiac tamponade
KW - Chest tubes
KW - Damage Control Surgery
KW - Death, sudden
KW - Hemothora
KW - Negative-pressure wound therapy
KW - Penetrating cardiac trauma
KW - Pericardial window techniques
KW - Pericardiectomy
KW - Pneumothorax
KW - Sternotomy
KW - Thoracic Ultrasound
KW - Thoracotomy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85108264578
U2 - 10.25100/cm.v52i2.4519
DO - 10.25100/cm.v52i2.4519
M3 - Artículo
C2 - 34188321
AN - SCOPUS:85108264578
SN - 0120-8322
VL - 52
JO - Colombia Medica
JF - Colombia Medica
IS - 2
M1 - e4034519
ER -