Blunt cardiac injury in the hemodynamically stable patient.

JAAPA

At St. Luke's Hospital/Southcoast Health in New Bedford, Mass., Mollie R. Calzone practices in trauma surgery and acute care surgery and Michael D. Grossman is the chief of acute care surgery and trauma medical director. The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Published: February 2024

Blunt cardiac injury (BCI) describes a spectrum of problems including severe, potentially life-threatening injuries from trauma. Pericardial effusion is an example of a BCI that has generally been assumed to imply serious underlying injury to the heart and should be considered hemopericardium until proven otherwise. A standard of care has been established to screen for BCI and treat hemodynamically unstable patients with an acute pericardial effusion presumably related to BCI. Less agreement exists on definitive treatment for hemodynamically stable patients with pericardial effusion after blunt cardiac trauma. This case study explores a new treatment for small to moderate hemopericardium in a stable patient after BCI.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.JAA.0000997692.54661.95DOI Listing

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