Publication | Closed Access
The Management of Penetrating Injuries of the Back
56
Citations
7
References
1988
Year
Anterior Abdominal InjuriesLaparoscopyMinimally Invasive ProcedureTraumatologyGastroenterologyTrauma SurgeryPhysical Abdominal ExaminationOrgan InjurySurgeryInjury PreventionAbdominal Physical FindingsVisceral SurgeryVisceral TraumaMedicineOrthopaedic SurgeryEmergency Medicine
This is a prospective study of 230 patients with penetrating injuries of the back. The decision to operate or observe was taken exclusively on the abdominal physical findings. One hundred ninety-five patients (85%) did not require operation, 30 (13%) underwent a therapeutic laparotomy, four (1.7%) an unnecessary operation, and one patient (0.4%) had a completely negative laparotomy. The diagnosis and management was delayed in five (2.2%) patients with no serious consequences. Mortality rates were not recorded in this series. The initial physical examination was accurate in 95.2% of the patients. We suggest that penetrating injuries of the back should be assessed in the same way as anterior abdominal injuries. Physical abdominal examination is reliable in detecting significant intra-abdominal injuries.
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