To evaluate the significance of myocardial contusion, we evaluated 243 stable patients hospitalized for blunt chest trauma between 1982 and 1986. The groups were identified according to results of radionuclide angiography, mean injury severity score (ISS), and outcome. Group I (n = 71; mean ISS = 12.7) patients were those without myocardial contusion by radionuclide angiography. Two patients with cardiac complications were in this group. The patients with myocardial contusion were divided into two groups. Group II (n = 69; ISS = 19.5) patients had myocardial contusion as an isolated injury, and group III (n = 103; ISS = 30.9) patients had myocardial contusion and injury to at least one other organ system. Three patients from group II had cardiac complications. Eleven patients from group III had cardiac complications. There were no significant differences between the cardiac complication rate in the three groups, and each complication was present when the patient arrived in the emergency department. The predicted mortality rate based on ISS was 10% to 20% for patients with myocardial contusion, whereas the observed mortality rate for the groups (II and III) overall was 0.58%. We conclude that in the stable trauma patient myocardial contusion (1) does not by itself increase the risk of complication, (2) does not necessitate intensive care unit monitoring, (3) should be devalued when computing ISS scores, (4) may account for lengthy and often unnecessary hospitalization, and (5) in patients at risk for complications may be identified by ECG abnormalities on arrival to the emergency department.
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Cureus
November 2024
Anesthesia and Critical Care, Mohammed VI University Hospital, Tangier, MAR.
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TTC), also known as stress-induced cardiomyopathy, is a rare condition in children that causes acute, severe, but often reversible systolic dysfunction of the left ventricle. Physical trauma is a recognized trigger, although distinguishing TTC from myocardial contusion in pediatric trauma cases can be challenging due to overlapping clinical features. We present the case of a six-year-old boy involved in a high-impact motor vehicle collision.
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July 2024
Department of Emergency Medicine, Taoyuan Armed Forces General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center, Taoyuan, Taiwan.
BACKGROUND A traumatic coronary artery dissection is a rare but severe complication of chest trauma that can result in blockage of the coronary artery. The clinical symptoms can vary considerably, from asymptomatic arrhythmia to acute myocardial infarction and sudden death. This report describes a young man with coronary artery dissection following blunt chest trauma from a motorcycle accident presenting with ventricular fibrillation due to acute myocardial infarction, which was treated with percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPol Merkur Lekarski
July 2024
DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, JÓZEF STRUŚ HOSPITAL, POZNAŃ, POLAND.
Blunt chest trauma (BCT) may rarely trigger stress-induced takotsubo syndrome (TTS) which requires dif f erential diagnosis with myocardial contusion and BCT-induced myocardial infarction. So far reported cases have been presented as apical ballooning or inverted (reverse) TTS forms but not as a midventricular variant. The authors described a case of a 53-year-old female admitted to Intensive Care Unit after motor vehicle accident with BCT and airbag deployment during car roll over.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Case Rep
April 2024
Department of Medicine, Hospital Canselor Tuanku Muhriz, Faculty of Medicine, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Bandar Tun Razak, Malaysia.
A man in his 20s with no medical illness sustained a blunt chest injury with pneumothorax and lung contusion after involving in a motorbike accident. Five days postadmission, he subsequently had myocardial infarction with cardiac arrest, in which coronary angiogram and intravascular ultrasound showed diffused multivessel coronary artery dissection.
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