Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/28783
Title: Factors affecting mortality and morbidity after traumatic diaphragmatic injury
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Genel Cerrahi Bilimler Bölümü.
0000-0002-9562-4195
Özgüç, Halil
Akköse, Şule
Şen, Gürol
Bulut, Mehtap
Kaya, Ekrem
AAG-7319-2021
AAX-5571-2021
6603867989
6603347542
23013375200
56233163200
7004568109
Keywords: Diaphragmatic injury
Mortality
Trauma
Rupture
Experience
Predictors
Issue Date: Dec-2007
Publisher: Springer
Citation: Özgüç, H. vd. (2007). "Factors affecting mortality and morbidity after traumatic diaphragmatic injury". Surgery Today, 37(12), 1042-1046.
Abstract: Purpose. We review our 11-year experience of treating diaphragmatic injury (DI), to identify the factors determining mortality and morbidity. Methods. We analyzed the effects of demographic characteristics, type of injury (blunt or penetrating), number of injured organs, injury severity score (ISS), revised trauma score (RTS), Glasgow coma score, and intensive care unit and hospital stay, on complications and mortality, in 51 patients treated for DI between January 1995 and December 2005. Results. Twenty-six (51%) patients suffered blunt injury and 25 (49%) suffered penetrating injury. The left diaphragm was injured in 40 (78%) patients, the right in 10 (19%), and both sides in 1 (2%). Only three (5.8%) patients had no concomitant injury. The diagnosis was made by the findings of laparotomy on 34 patients (65%), preoperative chest X-ray on 13 (25%), computed tomography on 2 (3.9%), and laparoscopy on 2 (3.9%). Complications developed in 23 (44%) patients and overall mortality was 19.6% (10/51). An ISS > 13 was found to be an independent prognostic factor for morbidity, whereas an RTS <= 11, age >= 48 years, and a major postoperative complication were independent prognostic factors for mortality. Conclusion. Establishing a preoperative diagnosis of DI is still problematic. Aggressive treatment and close monitoring of patients with an ISS > 13, an RTS <= 11, an age >= 48 years, or a postoperative complication may decrease morbidity and mortality.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00595-007-3545-1
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00595-007-3545-1
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/28783
ISSN: 1436-2813
0941-1291
Appears in Collections:PubMed
Scopus
Web of Science

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