Management of Complications of First Instance of Hepatic Trauma in a Liver Surgery Unit: Portal Vein Ligation as a Conservative Therapeutic Strategy.

Hepatic Trauma Liver surgery unit Management of complications Portal vein ligation Therapeutic choice

Journal

Open medicine (Warsaw, Poland)
ISSN: 2391-5463
Titre abrégé: Open Med (Wars)
Pays: Poland
ID NLM: 101672167

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2019
Historique:
received: 05 11 2018
accepted: 15 03 2019
entrez: 4 6 2019
pubmed: 4 6 2019
medline: 4 6 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

According to the National Trauma Data Bank, the liver, after the spleen, is the first most injured organ in closed abdominal trauma. From June 2010 to December 2015 we observed in our department of Hepato-biliary Surgery and Liver Transplant Unit of the A.O.R.N. A. Cardarelli of Naples 40 patients affected by hepatic trauma. In our retrospective study, we review our experience and propose portal vein ligation (PVL) as a first - line strategy for damage control surgery (DCS) in liver trauma. 26/40 patients (65%) which received gauze-packing represented our study group. In 10 cases out of 26 patients (38,4%) the abdominal packing was enough to control the damage. In 7 cases (18,4%) we performed a liver resection. In 7 cases, after de-packing, we adopted PVL to achieve DCS. Trans Arterial Embolization was chosen in 6 patients. 2 of them were discharged 14 days later without performing any other procedure.In 3 cases we had to perform a right epatectomy in second instance. Two hepatectomies were due to hemoperitoneum, and the other for coleperitoneum. Two patients were treated in first instance by only doing hemostasis on the bleeding site. We observed 6 patients in first instance. Five of them underwent surgery with hepatic resection and surgical hemostasis of the bleeding site. The other one underwent to conservative management. In summary we performed 15 hepatic resections, 8 of them were right hepatectomies, 1 left hepatectomy, 2 trisegmentectomies V-VI-VII. So in second instance we operated on 10 patients out of 34 (30%). The improved knowledge of clinical physio-pathology and the improvement of diagnostic and instrumental techniques had a great impact on the prognosis of liver trauma. We think that a rigid diagnostic protocol should be applied as this allows timely pathological finding, and consists of three successive but perfectly integrated steps: 1) patient reception, in close collaboration with the resuscitator; 2) accurate but quick diagnostic framing 3) therapeutic decisional making. Selective portal vein ligation is a well-tolerated and safe manoeuvre, which could be effective, even if not definitive, in treating these subjects. That is why we believe that it can be a choice to keep in mind especially in post-depacking bleeding.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
According to the National Trauma Data Bank, the liver, after the spleen, is the first most injured organ in closed abdominal trauma.
METHODS METHODS
From June 2010 to December 2015 we observed in our department of Hepato-biliary Surgery and Liver Transplant Unit of the A.O.R.N. A. Cardarelli of Naples 40 patients affected by hepatic trauma. In our retrospective study, we review our experience and propose portal vein ligation (PVL) as a first - line strategy for damage control surgery (DCS) in liver trauma.
RESULTS RESULTS
26/40 patients (65%) which received gauze-packing represented our study group. In 10 cases out of 26 patients (38,4%) the abdominal packing was enough to control the damage. In 7 cases (18,4%) we performed a liver resection. In 7 cases, after de-packing, we adopted PVL to achieve DCS. Trans Arterial Embolization was chosen in 6 patients. 2 of them were discharged 14 days later without performing any other procedure.In 3 cases we had to perform a right epatectomy in second instance. Two hepatectomies were due to hemoperitoneum, and the other for coleperitoneum. Two patients were treated in first instance by only doing hemostasis on the bleeding site. We observed 6 patients in first instance. Five of them underwent surgery with hepatic resection and surgical hemostasis of the bleeding site. The other one underwent to conservative management. In summary we performed 15 hepatic resections, 8 of them were right hepatectomies, 1 left hepatectomy, 2 trisegmentectomies V-VI-VII. So in second instance we operated on 10 patients out of 34 (30%).
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
The improved knowledge of clinical physio-pathology and the improvement of diagnostic and instrumental techniques had a great impact on the prognosis of liver trauma. We think that a rigid diagnostic protocol should be applied as this allows timely pathological finding, and consists of three successive but perfectly integrated steps: 1) patient reception, in close collaboration with the resuscitator; 2) accurate but quick diagnostic framing 3) therapeutic decisional making. Selective portal vein ligation is a well-tolerated and safe manoeuvre, which could be effective, even if not definitive, in treating these subjects. That is why we believe that it can be a choice to keep in mind especially in post-depacking bleeding.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31157303
doi: 10.1515/med-2019-0038
pii: med-2019-0038
pmc: PMC6534101
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

376-383

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Auteurs

Aldo Rocca (A)

Department of Translational Medical Sciences, University of Naples "Federico II", Naples, Italy.
Via Sergio Pansini, 80131 Naples, Italy General Surgery Unit, Clinica Padre Pio, Mondragone (CE), Italy Department of Abdominal Oncology, Fondazione Giovanni Pascale, IRCCS, Naples, Italy.
Centre of Hepatobiliarypancreatic surgery, Pineta Grande Hospital, Castelvolturno (CE), Italy.

Enrico Andolfi (E)

Department of Surgery, Division of general Surgery, San Donato Hospital, via Pietro Nenni 20-22, 52100 Arezzo, Italy.

Anna Ginevra Immacolata Zamboli (AGI)

General Surgery Unit, De Luca E Rossano Hospital, Vico Equense (NA), Italy.

Giuseppe Surfaro (G)

General Surgery Unit, Ospedale del Mare, Naples, Italy.

Domenico Tafuri (D)

Department of Sport Sciences and Wellness, University of Naples "Parthenope", Naples, Italy.

Gianluca Costa (G)

Surgical and Medical Department of Traslational Medicine, Sapienza University of Rome, Sant'Andrea Hospital, Via di Grottarossa 1035-39, 00189 Rome, Italy.

Barbara Frezza (B)

Department of Surgery, Division of general Surgery, San Donato Hospital, via Pietro Nenni 20-22, 52100 Arezzo, Italy.

Marta Scricciolo (M)

Department of Surgery, Division of general Surgery, San Donato Hospital, via Pietro Nenni 20-22, 52100 Arezzo, Italy.

Maurizio Amato (M)

Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, University Federico II of Naples. Naples, Italy.

Paolo Bianco (P)

Centre of Hepatobiliarypancreatic surgery, Pineta Grande Hospital, Castelvolturno (CE), Italy.

Sergio Brongo (S)

Plastic Surgery Unit, Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry "Scuola Medica Salernitana", San Giovanni di Dio e Ruggi D'Aragona University Hospital, University of Salerno, Salerno, Italy.

Graziano Ceccarelli (G)

Department of Surgery, Division of general Surgery, San Donato Hospital, via Pietro Nenni 20-22, 52100 Arezzo, Italy.

Antonio Giuliani (A)

Department of Transplantation, Unit of Hepatobiliary Surgery and Liver Transplant Center, 'A. Cardarelli' Hospital, Naples, Italy.

Bruno Amato (B)

Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, University Federico II of Naples. Naples, Italy.

Classifications MeSH