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[Successful treatment of retrohepatic inferior vena cava injury: report of two cases]. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses two cases of patients with retrohepatic inferior vena cava (IVC) injuries, highlighting the complex surgical interventions they underwent after sustaining traumatic injuries.* -
  • The first patient was a 79-year-old woman with stab wounds, while the second was a 25-year-old man with blunt abdominal trauma, illustrating different surgical challenges and techniques used to address their respective injuries.* -
  • The conclusion emphasizes the high mortality rate associated with IVC injuries and the importance of experienced surgical management, particularly in identifying and addressing these injuries in trauma cases.*

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Authors present two cases of successfully operated patients with retrohepatic inferior vena cava (IVC) injury. In the first case a 79 year old female patient suffered from multiple stab wounds in the area of the 4th segment of the right lung as well as in the retrohepatic region in close proximity to the IVC. At the time of the first surgery the IVC injury was not identified. During a second operation, however, the IVC was isolated from the liver using an anterior dissection of the parenchyma with finger-fracture technique and the injury was oversawn finally. Successful haemostasis of the liver was achieved by packing of the perihepatic space, which was removed three days later. In the second case a 25 year-old male patient had suffered blunt abdominal trauma. He underwent laparotomy and packing on the site of the hepatic injury, which had to be repeated seven more times. Later on, another urgent laparotomy was carried out for recurring intraabdominal bleeding and bile leakage, and cholecystectomy was performed due to gallbladder perforation. Another two days later a further emergency laparotomy was indicated for ongoing intraabdominal bleeding, when the bleeding source - an injury (3 mm in diameter) of the retrohepatic IVC - was oversawn. After relatively long postoperative stay both patients were fully recovered and discharged from hospital.

Conclusions: penetrating injuries of the IVC are associated with high mortality rate of approximately 78%. Proper management of these injuries requires experience in both vascular and liver surgery. Retrohepatic IVC injury needs to be considered in the differential diagnosis of ongoing bleeding in penetrating or blunt liver trauma. Packing of the liver is a reliable haemostatic method if bleeding persists due to division of the liver parenchyma.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/MaSeb.64.2011.5.5DOI Listing

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