Journal Article10.1016/J.JAMCOLLSURG.2021.04.031
Trauma Laparotomy in the UK: A Prospective National Service Evaluation
Max Marsden,Max Marsden,Paul Vulliamy,Paul Vulliamy,Rich Carden,Rich Carden,David N. Naumann,Ross Davenport,Ross Davenport,Henry Obinna Nnajiuba,Zane Perkins,Phillip Pearce,Seema Yalamanchili,Nabeela S. Malik,Nigel Tai,Tony Sim,Callum T. Kaye,Stavros Gourgiotis,Raimundas Lunevicius,Adeel Akhtar,Chris Finnegan,Francis Ezidi,Daniel McGeown,Adam Gowdy,Parv Sains,Charles Bull,Victoria Pegna,Charlotte Florence,David O’Reilly,Bryony Roberts,Emma Davies,Maria Bassett-Davies,Joseph Hardwicke,Michael Smith,Christopher Briggs,Somayyeh Mossadegh,Ibrahim Enemosah,Ben Stubbs,Charles A. West,Michael Wilson,Elizabeth Vaughan,Stuart McKechnie,Alice Graham,Mihir Chandarana,Helen R Dorrance,Lewis S. Gall,Mari-Claire McGuigan,Tom Cowlam,Alexander Bell,Christine Hardcastle,Duncan Bew,Kate Rej. Prior,Mark Winstanley,Jon Moore,Emma Stewart Parker,Jonathan Jones,Stella Ruth Smith,Rebecca Varley,Johanna Paterson,Laura Evans,Nicola Lipscombe,Ben Griffiths,Laura Jayne Watson,Adam Brooks,Nick Moody,Amar Kourdouli,Lauren Blackburn,Giles Bond-Smith,Anitha Muthusami,Natesh Shivakumar,Ewen A. Griffiths,Colin Bergin,Kirsty Challen,Michael Daley,Iain M. Smith,Gethin L. Williams,Olga Rutka,Jennifer Ross,Anthony Thaventhiran,Kate Hancorn,Andrea Rossetto,Rebecca Badminton,Esau Moreno-Camacho,Paul Farrelly,Oliver Harrison,Gary Maytham,Maryam Alfa-Wali,Helen Farrah,Harriet Owen,Jack Navein,Harsha Kodakadath,Mansoor Khan,Rebekka Troller,Julian Thompson,Michael Thompson,Charlotte Thompson,Ian Bailey,Jo Manson,Anna Sharrock,Michael Greenway,Alexandra Chesworth,Ashish Shrestha,Disha Mehta,Alan Watts,Una Cronin,Lorcan o Maoileannaigh,Sam Docherty +106 more
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the characteristics and outcomes of patients undergoing emergency abdominal operation and key processes of care in the UK and present a prospective multicenter service evaluation within all of the major trauma centers of the UK.
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Abstract: Background Trauma patients requiring abdominal operation have considerable morbidity and mortality, yet no specific quality indicators are measured in the trauma systems of the UK. The aims of this study were to describe the characteristics and outcomes of patients undergoing emergency abdominal operation and key processes of care. Study Design A prospective multicenter service evaluation was conducted within all of the major trauma centers in the UK. The study was conducted during 6 months beginning in January 2019. Patients of any age undergoing laparotomy or laparoscopy within 24 hours of injury were included. Existing standards for related emergent conditions were used. Results The study included 363 patients from 34 hospitals. The majority were young men with no comorbidities who required operation to control bleeding (51%). More than 90% received attending-delivered care in the emergency department (318 of 363) and operating room (321 of 363). The overall mortality rate was 9%. Patients with blunt trauma had a greater risk of death compared with patients with penetrating injuries (16.6% vs 3.8%; risk ratio 4.3; 95% CI, 2.0 to 9.4). Patients in which the Major Hemorrhage Protocol (MHP) was activated and who received a blood transfusion (n = 154) constituted a high-risk subgroup, accounting for 45% of the study cohort but 97% of deaths and 96% of blood components transfused. The MHP subgroup had expedited timelines from emergency department arrival to knife to skin (MHP: median 119 minutes [interquartile range 64 to 218 minutes] vs no MHP: median 211 minutes [interquartile range 135 to 425 minutes]; p Conclusions The majority of trauma patients requiring emergency abdominal operation received a high standard of expedited care in a maturing national trauma system. Despite this, mortality and resource use among high-risk patients remains considerable.
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Citations
Prehospital Partial Resuscitative Endovascular Balloon Occlusion of the Aorta for Exsanguinating Subdiaphragmatic Hemorrhage
Robbie Lendrum,Zane Perkins,Max Marsden,Claire Cochrane,Jennifer Ross,Frank Chege,Virginia L. Fitzpatrick-Swallow,Rob Greenhalgh,Jared M. Wohlgemut,Christine L. Henry,Ben Singer,Gareth Grier,Gareth Alban Davies,Nicholas Bunker,Daniel Nevin,Mike Christian,Marion Campbell,Nigel Tai,Austin Johnson,Jan O. Jansen,Samy Sadek,Karim Brohi +21 more
TL;DR: In this study, prehospital Z1 P-REBOA is feasible and may enable early survival, but with a significant incidence of late death.
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"Repair by Primary Closure of Traumatic Blunt Duodenal Injuries: Simple is Not Always Safe".
Dinesh Bagaria,Harshit Agarwal,Abhishek P. Jaiswal,Anand K. Katiyar,Shivam Pandey,Narendra S. Choudhary,Junaid Mehmood Alam,Biplab Mishra,Sushma Sagar,Subodh Kumar,Amit Gupta +10 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors used logistic regression to identify mortality predictors and found that duodenal trauma repair by primary closure might not be a safe strategy in an environment dealing predominantly blunt injuries with limited resources.
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A characterization of trauma laparotomies in a scandinavian setting: an observational study
Jakob Mejdahl Bentin,Emma Possfelt-Møller,Peter Olsen Svenningsen,S. S. Rudolph,Martin Sillesen +4 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a retrospective study was performed in the Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet (CUHR), where all patients undergoing a trauma laparotomy within the first 24 h of admission between January 1st 2019 and December 31st 2020 were included.
Novel Textbook Outcomes following emergency laparotomy: Delphi exercise.
D. N. Naumann,Aneel Bhangu,Adam Brooks,Bryan A Cotton,Mansoor Khan,Mark J. Midwinter,Lyndsay Pearce,Douglas M Bowley,John B Holcomb,Ewen A. Griffiths +9 more
TL;DR: Early and longer-term Textbook Outcomes have been agreed by an international consensus of experts for non-trauma and trauma emergency laparotomy and now require clinical validation with patient data.
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