Login
Site Search
Subscribe
Modify
Home >
List Archives
reimaging the spleen
SJASMD at aol.com SJASMD at aol.comSat Dec 1 23:40:41 GMT 2007
- Previous message: reimaging the spleen
- Next message: Acute Limb ischemia is elderly
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
In a message dated 12/1/2007 3:20:24 P.M. W. Europe Standard Time, rfsmithmd at comcast.net writes: If I were the treating physician, re-imaging would seem like a reasonable and prudent thing to do before sending the kid back into sport combat. Maybe Dr. Sclafani could better speak to my philosophical misgivings, but it seems to me in general imaging is for locating the source of pathology, not conveying functional health. Plus I think it would be hard in humans to prove what finding was the dividing line between "safe" and "not safe". Rob Smith Rob in 1979, when we started doing nonoperative management of splenic injuries using angiography as our triage criteria for need for hemostasis, it was somewhat difficult to get the patients in the scanner. We only had one, it wasn't in the ED, etc We were quite concerned about sending patients with untreated splenic injuries home so we Kept patients in the hospital until CT showed healing of the injury. We also performed angiography on many patients while they awaited discharge 3-8 weeks after their injury. We noted fairly soon that the CT appearance of the spleen looked worse at two weeks but that most patients were pretty much healed by six weeks. i think it was very interesting we never saw a false aneurysm when we repeated angiography or CT in patients who were managed by bedrest alone, without embolization. Perhaps the extravasation that we saw on angio (our criteria for embolization) was effectively managed by embolization and limited the incidence of false aneurysms caused by nonoperative management. I guess we triaged patients at risk for development of false aneurysm to embolization and thus never saw it. Obviously we could never duplicate our practice in the 1980s in our current environment. We progressively liberalized discharge until now we send home uncomplicated patients with CT diagnosed splenic injuries based on admission angio very early. At this time, we do not do followup CT as a rule. I guess we just arent worried about false aneurysms if we treated them with embolization. I don't think that CT can tell us whether solid healing has occurred anyway. I recommend a six month hiatus before resuming the type of physical activity that caused the injury. No evidence sal **************************************Check out AOL's list of 2007's hottest products. (http://money.aol.com/special/hot-products-2007?NCID=aoltop00030000000001)
- Previous message: reimaging the spleen
- Next message: Acute Limb ischemia is elderly
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the trauma-list mailing list
