Comparison of Clinical Characteristics, Therapy, and Short-Term Prognosis between Blunt and Penetrating Abdominal Trauma: A Multicentric Retrospective Cohort Study.
Yi LiuYunhe GaoZhida ChenJianxin CuiWenquan LiangZe WangLinde SunChuan PangYuan LvGuoxiao LiuTingting LuGan ZhangXiaoyu DongHong XuSheng YaoFeng LiangGang LiuGang ChenJianmiao HeWentong XuBo WeiHongqing XiLin ChenPublished in: Emergency medicine international (2024)
More patients with BAT were transferred to higher-level hospital, leading to significantly longer prehospital and preoperation time. In the subgroup of hemodynamically stable individuals, more patients with BAT experienced hollow viscus injuries. For those patients, aggressive diagnostic laparoscopic exploration may be beneficial. Patients with longer injury-regional hospital intervals, the need for ICU care, and higher injury severity scores (ISSs) suffered from worse prognoses.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- trauma patients
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- palliative care
- cardiac arrest
- prognostic factors
- adverse drug
- peritoneal dialysis
- clinical trial
- quality improvement
- acute care
- robot assisted
- phase iii
- mechanical ventilation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- smoking cessation