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Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center

Introduction Damage control laparotomy (DCL) in an urban trauma centre is associated with high mortality. Aim The purpose of this prospective study was to review the outcomes of DCL in a level one urban trauma centre, looking particularly at primary closure rate and other factors influencing outcome...

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Main Author: Kruger, Andries Michiel
Other Authors: Navsaria, Pradeep
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Surgery 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kruger, Andries Michiel
author2 Navsaria, Pradeep
author_browse Kruger, Andries Michiel
Navsaria, Pradeep
author_facet Navsaria, Pradeep
Kruger, Andries Michiel
author_sort Kruger, Andries Michiel
collection Thesis
description Introduction Damage control laparotomy (DCL) in an urban trauma centre is associated with high mortality. Aim The purpose of this prospective study was to review the outcomes of DCL in a level one urban trauma centre, looking particularly at primary closure rate and other factors influencing outcomes. Methods All patients undergoing DCL for penetrating trauma from May 2015 to July 2017 were retrieved from the prospectively recorded eTHR data base. Data retrieved were basic demographics, mechanism of injury, perioperative vitals and biochemical parameters. Injury severity was described by the Revised Trauma Score (RTS), Penetrating Abdominal Trauma Index (PATI), Injury Severity Score (ISS) and Trauma and Injury Severity Score (TRISS). Indications for DCL were determined as well as length of ICU stay, days of ventilation, number of procedures and primary abdominal closure rates. Complications and mortality were recorded. Results During the study period, 51 patients underwent DCL. Three patients sustained stab wounds and 47 patients suffered from gunshots. Only 1 female was included in the study with the other 50 being male. The mean age was 28 years and 4 months (range 15 to 48 years). Indications for laparotomy were haemodynamic instability (n = 27) and peritonism in stable patients (n = 22). The means for the different severity scores were RTS 7.36, ISS 17.5, TRISS 93.76 and PATI 28. Means were calculated for different physiological markers of trauma (lowest pH 7.12, highest lactate 7.11, lowest core temp 34.9˚C and lowest systolic BP 63.8 mmHg). The organs most commonly injured, in decreasing frequency, were small bowel (n = 33), large bowel (n = 25), abdominal vasculature (n = 22), liver (n = 18), stomach (n = 14), kidney (n = 10), diaphragm (n = 10), spleen (n = 9) and pancreas (n = 8). DCL procedures performed were abdominal packing (n = 36), bowel ligation (n = 30), vascular shunting (n = 5) and shunting of the ureter (n = 1). The median number of laparotomies done per patient was 3, with a primary fascial closure rate of 69%. The mortality rate was 29%. Conclusion DCL in our setting is associated with a 29% mortality rate. Severe acidosis, massive blood transfusion in first 24hours and median PATI score more than 47 are independent factors associated with increased mortality.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:29.432Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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publisher Department of Surgery
publisherStr Department of Surgery
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32281 Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center Kruger, Andries Michiel Navsaria, Pradeep Surgery Introduction Damage control laparotomy (DCL) in an urban trauma centre is associated with high mortality. Aim The purpose of this prospective study was to review the outcomes of DCL in a level one urban trauma centre, looking particularly at primary closure rate and other factors influencing outcomes. Methods All patients undergoing DCL for penetrating trauma from May 2015 to July 2017 were retrieved from the prospectively recorded eTHR data base. Data retrieved were basic demographics, mechanism of injury, perioperative vitals and biochemical parameters. Injury severity was described by the Revised Trauma Score (RTS), Penetrating Abdominal Trauma Index (PATI), Injury Severity Score (ISS) and Trauma and Injury Severity Score (TRISS). Indications for DCL were determined as well as length of ICU stay, days of ventilation, number of procedures and primary abdominal closure rates. Complications and mortality were recorded. Results During the study period, 51 patients underwent DCL. Three patients sustained stab wounds and 47 patients suffered from gunshots. Only 1 female was included in the study with the other 50 being male. The mean age was 28 years and 4 months (range 15 to 48 years). Indications for laparotomy were haemodynamic instability (n = 27) and peritonism in stable patients (n = 22). The means for the different severity scores were RTS 7.36, ISS 17.5, TRISS 93.76 and PATI 28. Means were calculated for different physiological markers of trauma (lowest pH 7.12, highest lactate 7.11, lowest core temp 34.9˚C and lowest systolic BP 63.8 mmHg). The organs most commonly injured, in decreasing frequency, were small bowel (n = 33), large bowel (n = 25), abdominal vasculature (n = 22), liver (n = 18), stomach (n = 14), kidney (n = 10), diaphragm (n = 10), spleen (n = 9) and pancreas (n = 8). DCL procedures performed were abdominal packing (n = 36), bowel ligation (n = 30), vascular shunting (n = 5) and shunting of the ureter (n = 1). The median number of laparotomies done per patient was 3, with a primary fascial closure rate of 69%. The mortality rate was 29%. Conclusion DCL in our setting is associated with a 29% mortality rate. Severe acidosis, massive blood transfusion in first 24hours and median PATI score more than 47 are independent factors associated with increased mortality. 2020-09-16T10:05:58Z 2020-09-16T10:05:58Z 2020 2020-09-15T17:25:10Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32281 eng application/pdf Department of Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Surgery
Kruger, Andries Michiel
Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center
title_full Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center
title_fullStr Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center
title_full_unstemmed Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center
title_short Review of Damage Control Laparotomy (DCL) outcomes in a Major Urban Trauma Center
title_sort review of damage control laparotomy dcl outcomes in a major urban trauma center
topic Surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32281
work_keys_str_mv AT krugerandriesmichiel reviewofdamagecontrollaparotomydcloutcomesinamajorurbantraumacenter