![]()
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Original Article | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Volume 3, Number 1, February 2010, pages 9-18 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Treatment of Liver
Trauma: Operative or Conservative Management Carmen Garcia Bernardoa, Josep Fustera, c, Ernest Bombuya, Santiago Sancheza, Joana Ferrera, Marco Antonio Loeraa, Josep Martia, Constantino Fondevilaa, Elizabet Zavalab, Juan Carlos Garcia-Valdecasasa
Manuscript accepted for publication February 9, 2010
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Table 1. Distribution of Mortality by Type of Initial
Treatment (Operative, Conservative and Failure) and Grade of the
Injury |
|||
|
|||
|
*Percentage of mortality by initial treatment group and grade of
injury |
Failure of conservative treatment
In 13 patients (9.1%), non surgical treatment failed with surgery being required (Table 1). The reason for failure was hemodynamic instability in 11 cases and a maintained low hematocrit values in two cases. For control we used abdominal echography in 4 patients and CT in other four. One patient required embolization of hepatic artery and surgery because bleeding continued after the embolization.
Nine of the patients were underdiagnosed after undergoing the complementary explorations, with grade V hepatic injuries going undiagnosed in two cases. Likewise, 4 splenic lesions were not diagnosed leading to reintervention in 3 cases, with hemorrhage from the hepatic injury not being observed and one right diaphragmatic injury was also not observed. Eleven underwent surgery during the first 24 hours and the remaining two cases had surgery on the 4th and 5th day, respectively. Two patients died (15.4%), due to ARDS in one patient with severe cranioencephalic trauma, and the other death was due to intrahospitalary pneumonia with multiorgan failure. The following complications were presented: one biliary leak, one bleeding, one respiratory distress and two respiratory infections. The mean hospital stay was of 16.1 days (range: 7 - 38 days). Blood transfusion was required in 92.3% of the patients (mean 13.3 + 10.4 red blood cell units). Figure 1 shows the management and mortality and Table 2 summarizes the morbid-mortality according to treatment group.
|
Table 2. Summary of Outcome
by Treatment Group |
||
|
||
|
*12 patients died during the first 48 hours. |
![]() |
Figure 1. Management and mortality.
|
The uni- and multi-variant analysis were performed.
Compared with the patients who underwent conservative management,
patients who underwent a surgical treatment had a higher initial and
final injury grade, more morbidity, mortality, hepatic mortality, higher
injury severity score (ISS), a more use of packed red
blood cell (RBC), fresh frozen plasma (FFP), Platelet (PLT) (Table
3). In multiple logistic regression model, only initial and final
injury grade are predictives factors (Table
3).
|
Table 3. Risk factors for
treatment by Uni-multivariante Analysis |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Table 4 presents the risk factors for injury grade identified by univariable analysis: hemodynamic inestability, vascular injury, surgical technique, pringle, mortality, hepatic mortality, hemoperitoneum, lesion size, red blood cell (RBC), fresh frozen plasma (FFP), Platelet (PLT), hospital stay. However, only hemoperitoneum and lesion size are predictives factors by multivariable analysis (Table 4).
|
Table 4. Comparison of
Patients With Low and High Injury Grade |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
*Values expressed as mean + standard desviation Abbreviations: RBC: red blood cell; FFP: fresh frozen plasma; PLT: Platelet, OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Comparative of two periods (1992-1999; 2000-2008)
Epidemiology, clinic, treatment characteristics and
complications in both groups show in
Table 5. We observed that in the second period there was a high
number of patients who were operated for inestability (82.3% vs 66%, p =
0.746).
|
Table 5.
Comparison of
Patients in Two Periods |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
In the last years, CT is the principal study for diagnosis of liver
injury instead of ultrasound used in the first period (p < 0.0001).
In the first period the
patients had more high-grade injuries (III-V)
(68.2% vs 47.2%, p =
0.022)
and extrabdominal lesions (69.3% vs 16.4%, p = 0.041)
respect to the second period.
Conservative management is the most used in the last
years (69.09% vs 55.68%, p = 0.077), with surgical techniques more
aggressive: 9 hepatic reseccion vs 6 in the first period; 4 simple
suture vs 21 and 5 exploratory laparotomy vs 9 (p = 0.087). Failure of
conservative treatment in first period is higher than in the second
(16.3% vs 13.1%, p = 0.482).
Mortality was similar in both periods of the study (13.6% in the first vs 14.5% in the second, p = 0.532). Morbidity related to surgery and medical complications decreased since 2000, surgical (38.4% vs 29.4%, p = 0.369) and medical (14.7% vs 3.6%, p = 0.028). General morbidity decreased in the second period (p = 0.015).
Discussion
In the last 15 years, the treatment of liver trauma has progressively evolved [4, 12]. At the beginning of the 1990’s several articles reported the possibility of non surgical treatment in patients with hemodynamic stability similar to what is carried out by pediatric surgeons in cases of hepatic-splenic injuries [9, 12]. The aim of this type of treatment is to thereby not only decrease the number of non therapeutic laparotomies [13-15] but also to achieve a reduction in the values of morbi-mortality. In this group of patients immediate surgery is substituted by initial non surgical treatment with close patient supervision. Surgery is indicated in cases of continued hemorrhage or the suspicion of the presence of determined associated lesions. Fortunately, a high percentage of injuries, around 85 %, are not severe (HIS < grade IV) [4, 16], which previously were treated with electrocoagulation, topical hemostatic agents or superficial ligature. In these injuries the hemorrhage had ceased at the time of surgery in a considerable number of cases [14]. It is in this group of patients that conservative treatment undoubtedly achieves the greatest percentage of success. However, in the remaining 10% - 20% of the severe hepatic injuries the decision as to whether surgery is necessary represents a difficult challenge for the surgeon.
Therapeutic evolution has become possible thanks to the diffusion of imaging techniques such as echography and abdominal CT which are more rapid, sensitive and specific in the diagnosis of abdominal injuries [2, 12, 14, 17, 18], and they have replaced peritoneal lavage because of its low specificity and bad prediction of the need for laparotomy [17], despite its high sensitivity and speed of application.
In our center we routinely use abdominal echography as the first complementary exploration in the study of abdominal trauma. If the patient presents signs of hemodynamic instability, echography is immediately performed with portable equipment in the Emergency Department. This is a cheap, non-invasive exploration which is rapid and has a high sensitivity and specificity of 80% - 95% [2, 19], for the detection of intraabdominal injuries, although it is a technician-dependent exploration with little specificity for detecting visceral lesions. With the presence of findings leading to suspicion of hepatic injury in a stable patient, the study is completed with abdominal CT with endovenous contrast to provide better knowledge of the liver injury, HIS classification and the determination or discarding of associated intraabdominal injuries. Up to three years ago only echographic study was frequently performed in patients with mild injuries which led to underevaluation of hepatic injury and the missing of other lesions which posteriorly caused complications. Although the initial treatment would have changed in few patients, we believe that an abdominal CT with contrast should be carried out within the first 24 hours on suspicion of hepatic injury. CT scanning has become the gold standard for diagnosis of solid organ injury and allows reasonably accurate grading of organ injuries and provides crude quantitation of the degree of hemoperitoneum [12].
In the series published, the applicability of conservative treatment in patients with liver injury has varied from 35% to 82% [6, 16] according to the year, the selection criteria and the number of patients studied. The two main variables guiding the therapeutic approach were hemodynamic instability and the need for transfusion [9, 20, 21]. In our center conservative treatment was implemented in 60.8 % of the cases in the last 17 years with a failure rate of 15%, which is slightly higher than what has been reported in the literature [6, 16].
There are no predictive criteria to allow either the selection of the type of adequate treatment or to predict the failure of conservative treatment. Thus, the application of conservative treatment in cases of liver trauma obliges the surgeon to perform continuous monitorization of the patient during the first 48 hours and to have adequate infrastructure to allow immediate surgery on observation of clinical deterioration of the patient [7]. During the first years most series limited the cases to non-severe injury (grade ≤ III) [5], restricting the use of conservative treatment to values below 40% of the cases. Posteriorly, the good results achieved led to progressive widening of the inclusion criteria [14].
Feliciano et al proposed conservative treatment for any lesion regardless of the magnitude as long as the patient remained hemodynamically stable and with hemoperitoneum of less than 500 ml as estimated by CT scan [22]. Currently most authors consider that the decisive factor in deciding the implementation of conservative treatment should be hemodynamic stability after initial recovery independently of the grade of the injury and the quantity of hemoperitoneum estimated by CT [2, 15, 20]. In the present series all the patients with grade V injury underwent surgery. In two cases conservative treatment was implemented but failed due to hemodynamic instability. In our limited experience severe grade V injuries appear to be a predictive factor requiring surgical treatment. Nonetheless, in a series of 500 patients who received conservative treatment, Malhota et al described a failure rate of only 23 % in the group of patients (n = 30) with grade V lesions [16]. Other series show that nonoperative management of high-grade liver injuries have been successful [14] but is associated with significant morbidity and correlates with the grade of liver injury [23]. Complications require a multidisciplinary treatment and a strategy should be anticipated in grade IV and V injury [24]. High-grade injuries can be managed nonoperatively, if operative intervention is not required for hemodynamic instability or associated injuries, with a low mortality [4, 14, 15, 25-27].
In this subgroup with high risk of conservative treatment failure, the use of angiography with selective embolization of the hepatic injuries may be useful [4, 28-30]. In our series only one case has been treated with selective embolization of hepatic artery. The main cause of the low use of angiography is that the majority of vascular injuries are venous [31]. The mortality from juxtahepatic venous injuries is generally reported from 50% to 80% and the direct approach is the correct attitude in these lesions [32]. It is important to emphasize that in our series the indexes of morbi-mortality were not greater in the patients with conservative treatment failure compared to similar injuries in the surgical group with the values of both groups being similar to those reported by other groups [16, 33-35].
Our comparative study between the two groups shows a development in diagnosis and similar treatment displayed in the others papers [4, 12] but in first period the patients had hepatic and extrabdominal lesions more heavy. The use of CT as gold standard technique in diagnosis and the conservative treatment in stable patients with low consumption of blood products and even in high grade injuries (IV-V) are the principals conclusions in this and others multiple reports [2, 14, 15, 20, 25].
In summary, conservative treatment of hepatic injury is
applicable (83.1%) in patients presenting hemodynamic stability,
although in grade V injuries there is a high risk of conservative
treatment failure and, in our opinion, these patients should undergo
surgical treatment after diagnosis. Failure of conservative treatment
does not necessarily lead to an increase in the incidence of
complications or mortality in centers with adequate infrastructure with
monitorization and/or continued intensive therapy and the immediate
possibility of performing surgery.
| 1. |
Feliciano DV.
Surgery for liver trauma. Surg Clin North Am 1989;69(2):273-284. [Medline] |
| 2. |
Parks RW,
Chrysos E, Diamond T. Management of liver trauma. Br J Surg
1999;86(9):1121-1135. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 3. |
Gallardo
Garcia M, Navarro Pinero A, Buendia Perez E, Oliva Munoz H, De la Fuente
Perucho A, Munoz Lopez A. [Diagnostic and therapeutic assessment of
liver trauma]. Rev Esp Enferm Dig 1991;79(2):105-111. [Medline] |
| 4. |
David
Richardson J, Franklin GA, Lukan JK, Carrillo EH, Spain DA, Miller FB,
Wilson MA, et al. Evolution in the management of hepatic trauma: a 25-year
perspective. Ann Surg 2000;232(3):324-330. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 5. |
Pachter HL,
Hofstetter SR. The current status of nonoperative management of adult
blunt hepatic injuries. Am J Surg 1995;169(4):442-454. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 6. |
Carrillo EH,
Richardson JD. The current management of hepatic trauma. Adv Surg
2001;35:39-59. [Medline] |
| 7. |
Brammer RD,
Bramhall SR, Mirza DF, Mayer AD, McMaster P, Buckels JA. A 10-year
experience of complex liver trauma. Br J Surg 2002;89(12):1532-1537. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 8. |
Jacobs IA,
Kelly K, Valenziano C, Pawar J, Jones C. Nonoperative management of
blunt splenic and hepatic trauma in the pediatric population:
significant differences between adult and pediatric surgeons? Am Surg
2001;67(2):149-154. [Medline] |
| 9. | Llado L, Jorba R, Pares D, Borobia FG, Biondo S, Farran L, Fabregat J, et al. Influence of the application of a management protocol in the treatment of blunt abdominal trauma [abstract in English]. Cir Esp 2002;72(2):79-83. |
| 10. |
Moore EE,
Cogbill TH, Jurkovich GJ, Shackford SR, Malangoni MA, Champion HR. Organ
injury scaling: spleen and liver (1994 revision). J Trauma
1995;38(3):323-324. [Medline] |
| 11. |
Gertler J,
Degutis LC, Clay R, Garvey R, Baker CC. Pitfalls in the diagnosis and
management of blunt splenic trauma. Conn Med 1986;50(10):645-647. [Medline] |
| 12. |
Richardson
JD. Changes in the management of injuries to the liver and spleen. J Am
Coll Surg 2005;200(5):648-669. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 13. |
Lucas CE,
Ledgerwood AM. Changing times and the treatment of liver injury. Am Surg
2000;66(4):337-341. [Medline] |
| 14. |
Silvio-Estaba L, Madrazo-Gonzalez Z, Ramos-Rubio E. [Current treatment
of hepatic trauma]. Cir Esp 2008;83(5):227-234. [Medline] |
| 15. | Jover-Navalon JM, Ramos-Rodriguez JL, Montón S, Ceballos-Esparragón J. Nonoperative management of blunt liver trauma. Selection and follow-up criteria [abstract in English]. Cir Esp 2004;76(3):130-141. |
| 16. |
Malhotra AK,
Fabian TC, Croce MA, Gavin TJ, Kudsk KA, Minard G, Pritchard FE. Blunt
hepatic injury: a paradigm shift from operative to nonoperative
management in the 1990s. Ann Surg 2000;231(6):804-813. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 17. |
Carrillo EH,
Platz A, Miller FB, Richardson JD, Polk HC, Jr. Non-operative management
of blunt hepatic trauma. Br J Surg 1998;85(4):461-468. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 18. |
Cuff RF,
Cogbill TH, Lambert PJ. Nonoperative management of blunt liver trauma:
the value of follow-up abdominal computed tomography scans. Am Surg
2000;66(4):332-336. [Medline] |
| 19. |
Rozycki GS,
Shackford SR. Ultrasound, what every trauma surgeon should know. J
Trauma 1996;40(1):1-4. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 20. |
Gonzalez-Castro
A, Suberviola Canas B, Holanda Pena MS, Ots E, Dominguez Artiga MJ,
Ballesteros MA. [Liver trauma. Description of a cohort and evaluation of
therapeutic options]. Cir Esp 2007;81(2):78-81. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 21. |
Schwab CW.
Selection of nonoperative management candidates. World J Surg
2001;25(11):1389-1392. [Medline] |
| 22. |
Feliciano DV.
Continuing evolution in the approach to severe liver trauma. Ann Surg
1992;216(5):521-523. [Medline] |
| 23. |
Kozar RA,
Moore FA, Cothren CC, Moore EE, Sena M, Bulger EM, Miller CC, et al.
Risk factors for hepatic morbidity following nonoperative management:
multicenter study. Arch Surg 2006;141(5):451-458; discussion 458-459.
[Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 24. |
Kozar RA,
Moore JB, Niles SE, Holcomb JB, Moore EE, Cothren CC, Hartwell E, et al.
Complications of nonoperative management of high-grade blunt hepatic
injuries. J Trauma 2005;59(5):1066-1071. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 25. |
Christmas
AB, Wilson AK, Manning B, Franklin GA, Miller FB, Richardson JD,
Rodriguez JL. Selective management of blunt hepatic injuries including
nonoperative management is a safe and effective strategy. Surgery
2005;138(4):606-610. [Medline] |
| 26. |
Coughlin PA,
Stringer MD, Lodge JP, Pollard SG, Prasad KR, Toogood GJ. Management of
blunt liver trauma in a tertiary referral centre. Br J Surg
2004;91(3):317-321. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 27. |
Gourgiotis
S, Vougas V, Germanos S, Dimopoulos N, Bolanis I, Drakopoulos S, Alfaras
P, et al. Operative and nonoperative management of blunt hepatic trauma
in adults: a single-center report. J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg
2007;14(4):387-391. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 28. |
Ciraulo DL,
Luk S, Palter M, Cowell V, Welch J, Cortes V, Orlando R, et al.
Selective hepatic arterial embolization of grade IV and V blunt hepatic
injuries: an extension of resuscitation in the nonoperative management
of traumatic hepatic injuries. J Trauma 1998;45(2):353-358; discussion
358-359. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 29. |
Hagiwara A,
Murata A, Matsuda T, Matsuda H, Shimazaki S. The efficacy and
limitations of transarterial embolization for severe hepatic injury. J
Trauma 2002;52(6):1091-1096. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 30. |
Mohr AM,
Lavery RF, Barone A, Bahramipour P, Magnotti LJ, Osband AJ, Sifri Z, et
al. Angiographic embolization for liver injuries: low mortality, high
morbidity. J Trauma 2003;55(6):1077-1081. [Medline] |
| 31. |
Buckman RF,
Jr., Miraliakbari R, Badellino MM. Juxtahepatic venous injuries: a
critical review of reported management strategies. J Trauma
2000;48(5):978-984. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 32. |
Polanco P,
Leon S, Pineda J, Puyana JC, Ochoa JB, Alarcon L, Harbrecht BG, et al.
Hepatic resection in the management of complex injury to the liver. J
Trauma 2008;65(6):1264-1269; discussion 1269-1270. [Medline] [CrossRef] |
| 33. |
Sanchez J, Seco JL, Aguado JM, Velasco F, Santamaría JL. Hepatic trauma: treatment and prognostic factors [abstract in English]. Cir Esp 1993; 54(1):237-241. |
| 34. | Gonzalez J, Navarrete F, Alvarez JA, Aza J. Hepatic trauma. Risk factors and treatment [abstract in English]. Cir Esp 1990; 48(6):666-671. |
| 35. |
Ochoa L, Merck B, Geli S, Diaz de Liano A. [Hepatic
trauma (90 consecutive cases treated in 9 years]. Rev Esp Enferm Dig
1991;79(6):393-396. |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI):10.4021/gr2010.02.165w
About
DOI and
CrossRef
Gastroenterology Research is a member of CrossRef.
![]()