Splenic trauma in adults: Impact of CT grading on management

Splenic trauma in adults: Impact of CT grading on management

ABSTRACTS those referred to the clinic returned for their appointments, and of these patients (247), 49 (20%) completed the full evaluation. The Cent...

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ABSTRACTS

those referred to the clinic returned for their appointments, and of these patients (247), 49 (20%) completed the full evaluation. The Center for Epidemiological StudiesDepression scale was used to screen for depressive syndrome, with 16 used as the cutoff score (scores over 16 are increasingly associated with a risk of depressive disorder). The DSM-III criteria for panic disorder and panic attack were transformed into questions to screen for panic disorder. Forty-two patients had pain atypical for angina and no cardiac diagnosis. Five were diagnosed with stable angina and two with mitral valve prolapse. No patient had new ECG abnormalities. Thirty subjects (61%) scored positively on at least one psychopathologic screening measure, with 41% reporting depression, 43% panic attacks, and 16% panic disorder. Almost half of those reporting either depression or panic attacks also reported the other disorder. Of the 30 patients with positive screens, emergency physicians suggested a possible psychosocial contribution to the chest pain in nine (30%), but only one of the 30 received any psychiatric diagnosis ("anxiety"). The investigators conclude that depression and panic disorders may have high prevalence rates in ED patients with atypical chest pain and suggest the need to include psychiatric disorders in the diagnosis of atypical chest pain.

David Tse, MD

spleen, trauma, computed tomography

required surgery, six h a d life-threatening hemodynamic instability, and five had "gradual deterioration of their condition." None of the seven patients operated on after 24 hours had splenorrhaphy. Three of eight operated on within 24 hours had splenorrhaphy. One of ten patients with a splenic trauma score of less than 2.5 had an operation (splenectomy), but the scan on this patient was suboptimal. During the second (prospective) phase, there were 35 patients with evidence of splenic trauma on CT scanning. Of these, conservative management was successful on 26. There were no patients with a splenic trauma score of less than 2.5. Of the remainder, nine of 12 patients with a score of 2.5 or more underwent surgery, with six of nine having splenorrhaphy. There were apparently no cases of hemodynamic instability forcing surgery in phase 2. The reasons for not operating on three of the patients in stage 2 with scores of 2.5 or more were not discussed. This study is fairly typical in both its weaknesses and its strengths of the bewildering data being amassed on the use of CT for blunt abdominal trauma. It gives convincing data on the apparent nonoperative salvageability of spleens with trauma scores of less than 2.5. However, it also gives convincing data on the danger of conservative management in that there were six cases of life-threatening instability, and all cases of delayed operation resulted in splenectomy. The prospective nature of stage 2 is suspect in that the surgeons were aware of qualitative results of CT prior to the scored results and because the decision to operate was based on a multitude of clinical and radiologic data.

James Vayda, MD

Splenic trauma in adults: Impact of CT grading on management Scatamacchis S, Raptopoulo s V, Fink M, et al

Radiology 171:725-729

headache, vascular, dihydroergotamine

Jun 1989

This was a two-part study on the use of a computed tomography (CT) for the grading of injury to the spleen in blunt abdominal trauma. The first part was retrospective, using a previously developed grading system, and the second part was a prospective analysis of the effect of the system on patient management. The grading system assigned one to three points for increasing grades of splenic injury, with half-point adjustments for unclear diagnoses. Added to this score was a one-to-three-point system for grading "fluid in the peritoneum." During the prospective phase, CT was performed within 24 hours of presentation, the results of which were made available to the surgeons in qualitative form. At this time, the decision to attempt conservative management was made. Subsequently, the CT results were reviewed by an attending physician, and a splenic trauma score was tabulated. Surgeons then revised their decision to operate based on this score and on the clinical condition of the patient. All patients during this stage "had a soft abdomen and stable blood pressure and pulse rate." In stage 1, 29 patients with a discharge diagnosis of splenic trauma had CT within 24 hours of injury. Of these, 14 were managed conservatively. Of the 15 who 160/1371

Comparison of single-dose meperidine, butorphanol and dihydroergotamine in the t r e a t m e n t of vascular headache Belgrade MJ, Ling LJ, Schleevogt MB, et al

Neurology 39:590-592 Apr 1989

This nonblinded, prospective, randomized study was initiated to compare the effects of three different treatment modalities on migraine or primary vascular headaches. Treatment protocols included meperidine 75 mg plus hydroxyzine 50 mg IM; butorphanol 2 mg IM; and dihydroergotamine (DHE) 1 mg plus metoclopramide 10 mg IV. Sixty-four patients presenting to a county emergency department were randomized to the three groups; 62 completed the study. Parameters evaluated included vascular score, to evaluate for placement into study; pain score, to evaluate pre- and one-half hour post-treatment pain levels; blood pressure, pre- and 15 minute post-treatment pain levels; and narcotic-seeking scale. Post-treatm e n t pain scores were lowest in DHE group (P < .01); eight of 21 patients receiving DHE had more than 90%

Annals of Emergency Medicine

18:12 December 1989