Eun John C, Bronsert Michael, Hansen Kristine, Moulton Steven L, Jazaeri Omid, Nehler Mark, Greenberg Joshua I
Section of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, CO.
Department of Surgery, Primary Children's Hospital, Salt Lake City, UT; Department of Surgery, Children's Hospital Colorado, Aurora, CO.
Ann Vasc Surg. 2015 Jan;29(1):109-13. doi: 10.1016/j.avsg.2014.10.003. Epub 2014 Oct 31.
Trauma is the leading cause of injury and death for individuals aged 1-44 years. Up to 8% of the US population participates in winter sports, and although vascular injuries are uncommon in these activities, little is published in this area. We sought to identify the incidence, injury patterns, and outcomes of vascular injuries resulting from winter sports trauma.
Patients with winter sports trauma and the subset with vascular injuries were identified by accessing the National Trauma Data Bank querying years 2007-2010. Patients with and without vascular injuries were then compared. Admission variables included transport time, emergency department hypotension (systolic blood pressure < 90), Glasgow Coma Scale ≤ 8, Injury Severity Score ≥ 25, fractures, solid organ injury, and vascular injury. Outcomes were analyzed and associations with vascular injuries were determined.
A total of 2,298 patients were identified with winter sports-related trauma and 28 (1.2%) had associated vascular injuries. Overall, the top 3 injuries were head trauma (16.7%), thoracic vertebral fractures (5.5%), and lumbar vertebral fractures (5.1%). The most common associated vascular injures were to the popliteal artery (17.7%), splenic artery (14.7%), and brachial blood vessels (14.7%). In the entire cohort, 1 patient (0.04%) suffered an amputation and 15 patients (0.7%) died. There were no amputations in the vascular injury group. Mortality was 0.6% in patients without a vascular injury compared with 7.1% of those with a vascular injury (P = 0.01).
Although vascular injury is an uncommon associated finding in winter sports trauma, it is associated with a significant increase in mortality. These findings highlight the need for rapid identification of traumatic vascular injuries, which predicts worse overall outcomes in this patient population.
创伤是1至44岁人群受伤和死亡的主要原因。高达8%的美国人口参与冬季运动,尽管血管损伤在这些活动中并不常见,但该领域发表的相关文献很少。我们试图确定冬季运动创伤导致的血管损伤的发生率、损伤模式和预后。
通过查询2007 - 2010年的国家创伤数据库,确定冬季运动创伤患者以及血管损伤亚组。然后对有和没有血管损伤的患者进行比较。入院变量包括转运时间、急诊科低血压(收缩压<90)、格拉斯哥昏迷量表≤8、损伤严重度评分≥25、骨折、实体器官损伤和血管损伤。分析预后并确定与血管损伤的关联。
共确定2298例与冬季运动相关的创伤患者,其中28例(1.2%)伴有血管损伤。总体而言,前三大损伤为头部创伤(16.7%)、胸椎骨折(5.5%)和腰椎骨折(5.1%)。最常见的相关血管损伤是腘动脉(17.7%)、脾动脉(14.7%)和肱血管(14.7%)。在整个队列中,1例患者(0.04%)截肢,15例患者(0.7%)死亡。血管损伤组无截肢病例。无血管损伤患者的死亡率为0.6%,而有血管损伤患者的死亡率为7.1%(P = 0.01)。
尽管血管损伤在冬季运动创伤中是一种不常见的相关发现,但它与死亡率的显著增加有关。这些发现强调了快速识别创伤性血管损伤的必要性,这预示着该患者群体的总体预后更差。