EVALUATION, MODIFICATION, AND DECISION-MAKING IN DAMAGE CONTROL STRATEGY : HEPATIC INJURY MANAGED BY TAE, PHP, OAM, AND RESECTIONAL DEBRIDEMENT - A CASE REPORT

Treatment strategies for life-threatening liver injuries remain controversial and challenging. A man in his 50s, with a history of heavy drinking, suffered a blunt thoracoabdominal injury in a single motor vehicle crash. Transarterial embolization was performed for the posterior branch of the right...

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Published inJournal of the Japanese Association for the Surgery of Trauma Vol. 38; no. 3; pp. 435 - 440
Main Authors OKAMURA, Shoko, KURATA, Hideaki, TOMIOKA, Joji, TOKUMARU, Teppei
Format Journal Article
LanguageJapanese
Published The Japanese Association for the Surgery of Trauma 20.07.2024
一般社団法人 日本外傷学会
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ISSN1340-6264
2188-0190
DOI10.11382/jjast.38.3_02

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Summary:Treatment strategies for life-threatening liver injuries remain controversial and challenging. A man in his 50s, with a history of heavy drinking, suffered a blunt thoracoabdominal injury in a single motor vehicle crash. Transarterial embolization was performed for the posterior branch of the right hepatic artery because of an intraparenchymal hematoma with active arterial bleeding. After eight hours, perihepatic packing was conducted due to rebleeding. Six hours later, open abdomen management was administered for abdominal compartment syndrome. Forty hours later, a planned reoperation was performed, which included resectional debridement for liver injury and transcystic C-tube drainage. Drain management for liver infarction and infection was performed as a bridging treatment, and the patient was subsequently discharged in a favorable condition. It is suggested that continuous assessment and modification of the damage control strategy for severe liver injury helps achieve favorable outcomes.
ISSN:1340-6264
2188-0190
DOI:10.11382/jjast.38.3_02