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Emergent Thoracotomy

kmattox at aol.com kmattox at aol.com
Fri Aug 4 23:04:12 BST 2006


1. Congratulations on your approach, speed, dexterity, and wisdom.  

2. The incision you choose is the best under the circumstances you described.  

3. Inflow occlusion might have helped to decrease ventricular destenion

4. The mortality from injury to azygous vein alone is high.   See recent article in JTrauma.   

With injuries and physiology described this was non survivable.   

Thanks for sharing

K. 
Sent via BlackBerry, return via KMattox at aol.com
  

-----Original Message-----
From: "Sohail Muzammil" <sohailmuzammil at hotmail.com>
Date: Fri, 04 Aug 2006 11:07:44 
To:trauma-list at trauma.org
Subject: Emergent Thoracotomy

Grenade blast. mid twenties male with multiple pellet wounds. Significantly 
Rt and Lt infraclavicular region, Lt parasternal, epigastric and suprapubic.

Combatative, shocked, air hunger. Rt chest tube 1800 ml blood. Rapid 
downhill gasping as wheeled into theater. Arrested in theater.

Lt ant thoracotomy: Large clot and blood spurt as pericardium opened. 
Puncture wound 3mm x 3mm in ant wall Lt vent closed. Heart revived with DC 
shock and cardiac massage continued as thoracotomy converted to clamshell. 
Arrest again. Massage continued

Exit wound in posterior wall of vent as well as exit into diaphragm seen. Rt 
chest azygos v inj. Abdo: puncture through liver with trickle of blood. 
Before post cardiac wound repair heart could not be revived. Patient 
expired.

Total time from arrival to death declared 34 min
Injury to arrival +/- 30 min.

Questions:

comment on choice of approach/extension
Any other maneuver to get to the post wall of the heart from the left?
Any other comments

Thanks in advance.

S Muzammil, FRCS
Combined Military Hospital
Lahore Pakistan


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