Abstract
Patients with traumatic aortic tears and severe life-threatening associated injuries require early and expeditious evaluation and treatment in order to improve survival. Diagnostic and treatment priorities, however, are not clearly established in this subset of patients. The purpose of this retrospective analysis was to help identify successful diagnostic and treatment priorities in this group of patients. Between 1979–1989 the medical records of all patients sustaining blunt chest trauma resulting in a traumatic aortic tear were reviewed. There were 11 patients with multiple injuries and this diagnosis was treated at Boston University Medical Center. Five patients had diagnostic peritoneal lavage or an exploratory laparotomy prior to a thoracotomy. Four patients had only a thoracotomy. Two patients in this series had a thoracotomy prior to treatment of suspected intraabdominal injuries. One of these two patients died. Our overall survival rate was 82%. This series suggests that the management sequence in patients with coexistent injuries should include treatment of severe associated injuries prior to treatment of the aortic injury and that initial treatment of traumatic aortic tears is appropriate if there is no evidence of severe life-threatening trauma.
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Hudson, H.M., Woodson, J. & Hirsch, E. The management of traumatic aortic tear in the multiply-injured patient. Annals of Vascular Surgery 5, 445–448 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02133049
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02133049