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Delayed laparotomy after selective non-operative management of penetrating abdominal injuries. World J Surg 2015 Feb;39(2):380-6

Date

10/04/2014

Pubmed ID

25277981

DOI

10.1007/s00268-014-2813-7

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84921938656 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   16 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Main concern during the practice of selective non-operative management (SNOM) for abdominal stab wounds (SW) and gunshot wounds (GSW) is the potential for harm in patients who fail SNOM and receive a delayed laparotomy (DL). The aim of this study is to determine whether such patients suffer adverse sequelae because of delays in diagnosis and treatment when managed under a structured SNOM protocol.

METHODS: 190 patients underwent laparotomy after an abdominal GSW or SW (5/04-10/12). Patients taken to operation within 120 min of admission were included in the early laparotomy (EL) group (n =153, 80.5 %) and the remaining in the DL group (n =37, 19.5 %). Outcomes included mortality, hospital stay, and postoperative complications.

RESULTS: The median time from hospital arrival to operation was 43 min (range: 17-119) for EL patients and 249 min (range: 122-1,545) for DL patients. The average number and type of injuries were similar among the groups. Mortality and negative laparotomy were observed only in the EL group. There was no significant difference in the hospital stay between the groups. The overall complications were higher in the EL group (44.4 vs. 24.3 %, p =0.026). DL was independently associated with a lower likelihood for complications (OR 0.39, 95 % CI 0.16-0.98, p =0.045). Individual review of all DL patients did not reveal an incident in which complications could be directly attributed to the delay.

CONCLUSIONS: In a structured protocol, patients who fail SNOM and require an operation are recognized and treated promptly. The delay in operation does not cause unnecessary morbidity or mortality.

Author List

Peev MP, Chang Y, King DR, Yeh DD, Kaafarani H, Fagenholz PJ, De Moya MA, Velmahos GC

Author

Marc Anthony De Moya MD Chief, Professor in the Surgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Abdominal Injuries
Adolescent
Adult
Clinical Protocols
Delayed Diagnosis
Female
Hospital Mortality
Humans
Laparotomy
Length of Stay
Male
Time Factors
Time-to-Treatment
Wounds, Gunshot
Wounds, Stab
Young Adult