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Journal Article

Citation

Lunevicius R, Lewis D, Ward RG, Chang A, Samalavicius NE, Schulte KM. Tech. Coloproctol. 2014; 18(11): 981-992.

Affiliation

Emergency General Surgery and Major Trauma Units, Cheshire and Merseyside Major Trauma Centre, Aintree University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Lower Lane, Liverpool, L9 7AL, UK, raimundas.lunevicius@aintree.nhs.uk.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Springer-Verlag Italia)

DOI

10.1007/s10151-014-1168-2

PMID

24913973

Abstract

Clinical research on penetrating injury to the buttock is sparse and largely limited to case reports and clinical series. The purpose of this paper is to provide a detailed overview of literature of the topic and to propose a basic algorithm for management of penetrating gluteal injuries (PGI). MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochran, and CINAHL databases were employed. Thirty-seven papers were selected and retrieved for overview from 1,021 records. PGI accounts for 2-3 % of all penetrating injuries, with a mortality rate up to 4 %. Most haemodynamically stable patients will benefit from traditional wound care and selective non-operative management. When gluteal fascia injury is confirmed or suspected, a contrast-enhanced CT-scan provides the most accurate injury diagnosis. CT-scan-based angiography and endovascular interventions radically supplement assessment and management of patients with penetrating injury to the major buttock and adjacent extra-buttock arteries. Immediate life-saving damage-control surgery is indicated for patients with hypovolemic shock and signs of internal bleeding. A universal basic management algorithm is proposed. This overview shows that penetrating injury to the buttock should be regarded as a potential life-threatening injury, and therefore, patients with such injuries should be managed in trauma centres equipped with hybrid operating theatres for emergency endovascular and open surgery for multidisciplinary teams operating 24/7.


Language: en

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