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Road Traffic Accident Traumatic Vehicle Seat Belt Abdominal Wall Hernia.

Mahmoud R ManasraRoua E FarahArein A AbufaraBara M AbuIrayyehRahaf E FarahMohammed A Maraqa
Published in: Case reports in surgery (2024)
Traumatic abdominal wall hernia (TAWH) is a rare type of hernia with an incidence of about <1.5%, resulting from blunt abdominal trauma, which leads to an increase in the intra-abdominal pressure and rupture in the abdominal musculature and fascia with herniation of the abdominal organs into the defect. Most TAWH contained either a small bowel (69%) or a large bowel (36%), with 16% containing both. This condition is often not present as an isolated case, as 30% to 60% of the cases are accompanied by other intra-abdominal injuries. The typical manner of presentation is a tender subcutaneous swelling across the abdomen wall with overlaying bruising and ecchymosis. The radiological investigative modality of CT scan has the highest index of diagnosing accompanied intra-abdominal visceral injuries. We present a rare case of a 23-year-old male patient diagnosed with TAWH containing both small bowel and sigmoid colon associated with psoas hematoma caused by a seat belt postroad traffic accident (RTA).
Keyphrases
  • small bowel
  • rare case
  • spinal cord injury
  • air pollution
  • computed tomography
  • case report
  • dual energy
  • risk factors
  • type diabetes
  • contrast enhanced
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • image quality
  • magnetic resonance