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Journal Article

Citation

Siram SM, Gerald SZ, Greene WR, Hughes K, Oyetunji TA, Chrouser K, Cornwell EE, Chang DC. Am. J. Surg. 2010; 199(4): 566-570.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Howard University College of Medicine, 2041 Georgia Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20060, USA. ssiram@howard.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.amjsurg.2009.11.001

PMID

20359576

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Traumatic ureteral injuries are uncommon, thus large series are lacking. METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of the National Trauma Data Bank (2002-2006). RESULTS: Of the 22,706 genitourinary injuries, 582 ureteral injury patients were identified (38.5% blunt, 61.5% penetrating). Patients were 84% male, 38% white, and 37% black (mean age, 31 y). Blunt trauma patients had a median Injury Severity Score of 21.5 versus 16.0 for penetrating injury (P < .001). Mortality rates were 9% blunt, and 6% penetrating (P = .166). Penetrating trauma patients had a higher incidence of bowel injuries (small bowel, 46%; large bowel, 44%) and vascular injuries (38%), whereas blunt trauma patients had a higher incidence of bony pelvic injuries (20%) (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Ureteral injuries are uncommon, seen in approximately 3 per 10,000 trauma admissions, and occur more in penetrating than in blunt trauma. The most common associated injury for blunt ureteral trauma is pelvic bone fracture, whereas penetrating ureteral trauma patients have more hollow viscus and vascular injuries.


Language: en

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