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Published in: European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery 3/2023

14-12-2022 | Splenectomy | Original Article

Pseudoaneurysms after high-grade blunt solid organ injury and the utility of delayed computed tomography angiography

Authors: Morgan Schellenberg, Natthida Owattanapanich, Brent Emigh, Chance Nichols, Joshua Dilday, Chaiss Ugarte, Atsushi Onogawa, Kazuhide Matsushima, Matthew J. Martin, Kenji Inaba

Published in: European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery | Issue 3/2023

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Abstract

Purpose

Pseudoaneurysms (PSA) can occur following high-grade solid organ injury. PSA natural history is unclear but risk for spontaneous rupture and exsanguination exist. The yield of delayed CT Angiography (dCTA) for PSA diagnosis is not well delineated and optimal timing is undefined. The study objective was definition of dCTA utility in diagnosing and triggering intervention for PSA after high-grade blunt solid organ injury.

Methods

All blunt trauma patients arriving to our ACS-verified Level 1 trauma center with AAST grade ≥ III liver, spleen, and/or kidney injury were included in this retrospective observational study (01/2017–10/2021). Exclusions were age < 18 year, transfers in, death < 48 h, and immediate nephrectomy/splenectomy. dCTA performance was not protocolized and pursued at attending surgeon discretion. Demographics, clinical/injury data, and outcomes were collected. Primary outcome was dCTA-triggered intervention. Statistical testing with ANOVA/Chi squared compared outcomes by type of solid organ.

Results

349 blunt trauma patients with 395 high-grade solid organ injuries met study criteria. Median AAST grade of solid organ injury was 3 [3–4]. dCTA for PSA screening was pursued in 175 patients (44%), typically on hospital day 4 [3–7]. dCTA identified vascular lesions in 16 spleen, 10 liver, and 6 kidney injuries. dCTA triggered intervention in 24% of spleen, 13% of kidney, and 9% of liver injured patients who were screened, for an overall yield of 14%. Intervention was typically AE (n = 23, 92%), although two splenic PSA necessitated splenectomy.

Conclusion

Delayed CTA for PSA screening after high-grade blunt solid organ injury was performed in half of eligible patients. dCTA identified numerous vascular lesions requiring endovascular or surgical intervention, with highest yield for splenic injuries. We recommend consideration of universal screening of high-grade blunt solid organ injuries with delayed abdominal CTA to avoid missing PSA.
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Metadata
Title
Pseudoaneurysms after high-grade blunt solid organ injury and the utility of delayed computed tomography angiography
Authors
Morgan Schellenberg
Natthida Owattanapanich
Brent Emigh
Chance Nichols
Joshua Dilday
Chaiss Ugarte
Atsushi Onogawa
Kazuhide Matsushima
Matthew J. Martin
Kenji Inaba
Publication date
14-12-2022
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery / Issue 3/2023
Print ISSN: 1863-9933
Electronic ISSN: 1863-9941
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00068-022-02197-2

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