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. 2018 Feb;25(1):32-38.
doi: 10.1097/MEJ.0000000000000401.

Selective nonoperative management of penetrating thoracic injury

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Selective nonoperative management of penetrating thoracic injury

Oscar J F Van Waes et al. Eur J Emerg Med. 2018 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Thoracic penetrating injury is a cause for up to one-fifth of all non-natural deaths. The aim of this study was to determine the success of selective nonoperative management (SNOM) of patients presenting with a penetrating thoracic injury (PTI).

Methods: This was a prospective study of patients with PTI who presented to a level 1 Trauma Center between April 2012 and August 2012.

Results: A total of 248 patients were included in the study, with 5.7% (n=14) requiring immediate emergency surgery. Overall, five of these 248 patients died, resulting in a mortality rate of 2.0%. Primarily 221 patients (89.1%) were managed with SNOM, of whom 15 (6.8%) failed conservative management. Failure of SNOM was primarily caused by complications of chest tube drainage (n=12) (e.g. retained clot, empyema) and delayed development of cardiac tamponade (n=3). The survival rate in the SNOM group was 100%.

Conclusion: PTI has a low in-hospital mortality rate. Only 16.5% (41/248) of the patients presenting with PTI will need surgical treatment. The other patients are safe to be treated conservatively according to a protocolized SNOM approach for PTI without any additional mortality. Conservative treatment of patients who were selected for this nonoperative treatment strategy with repeated clinical reassessment was successful in 93.2%.

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