Department of Traumatology, John Hunter Hospital and University of Newcastle, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.
Br J Surg. 2014 Jan;101(1):e109-18. doi: 10.1002/bjs.9360. Epub 2013 Nov 25.
Damage control surgery is a management sequence initiated to reduce the risk of death in severely injured patients presenting with physiological derangement. Damage control principles have emerged as an approach in non-trauma abdominal emergencies in order to reduce mortality compared with primary definitive surgery.
A PubMed/MEDLINE literature review was conducted of data available over the past decade (up to August 2013) to gain information on current understanding of damage control surgery for abdominal surgical emergencies. Future directions for research are discussed.
Damage control surgery facilitates a strategy for life-saving intervention for critically ill patients by abbreviated laparotomy with subsequent reoperation for delayed definitive repair after physiological resuscitation. The six-phase strategy (including damage control resuscitation in phase 0) is similar to that for severely injured patients, although non-trauma indications include shock from uncontrolled haemorrhage or sepsis. Minimal evidence exists to validate the benefit of damage control surgery in general surgical abdominal emergencies. The collective published experience over the past decade is limited to 16 studies including a total of 455 (range 3-99) patients, of which the majority are retrospective case series. However, the concept has widespread acceptance by emergency surgeons, and appears a logical extension from pathophysiological principles in trauma to haemorrhage and sepsis. The benefits of this strategy depend on careful patient selection. Damage control surgery has been performed for a wide range of indications, but most frequently for uncontrolled bleeding during elective surgery, haemorrhage from complicated gastroduodenal ulcer disease, generalized peritonitis, acute mesenteric ischaemia and other sources of intra-abdominal sepsis.
Damage control surgery is employed in a wide range of abdominal emergencies and is an increasingly recognized life-saving tactic in emergency surgery performed on physiologically deranged patients.
损伤控制性手术是一种旨在降低生理紊乱的严重创伤患者死亡风险的管理序列。损伤控制原则已作为一种方法出现在非创伤性腹部急症中,以降低死亡率,与原发性确定性手术相比。
对过去十年(截至 2013 年 8 月)的 PubMed/MEDLINE 文献进行了综述,以获取有关腹部外科急症损伤控制性手术当前理解的信息。讨论了未来的研究方向。
损伤控制性手术通过缩短剖腹术并在生理复苏后进行延迟确定性修复,为危重病患者提供了一种挽救生命的干预策略。六个阶段的策略(包括 0 期的损伤控制性复苏)与严重创伤患者相似,尽管非创伤性指征包括不受控制的出血或败血症引起的休克。几乎没有证据证明损伤控制性手术在一般外科腹部急症中的益处。过去十年的集体发表经验仅限于 16 项研究,共包括 455 名(范围 3-99)患者,其中大多数是回顾性病例系列。然而,这一概念已被急诊外科医生广泛接受,并且似乎是从创伤的病理生理原则到出血和败血症的逻辑延伸。这一策略的好处取决于对患者的精心选择。损伤控制性手术已用于广泛的适应症,但最常用于择期手术期间的失控性出血、复杂的胃十二指肠溃疡病出血、弥漫性腹膜炎、急性肠系膜缺血和其他来源的腹腔内感染。
损伤控制性手术用于广泛的腹部急症,并且在对生理紊乱的患者进行急诊手术时,是一种越来越被认可的挽救生命的策略。