Grimm M R, Vrahas M S, Thomas K A
Bioengineering Laboratory-Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans 70112, USA.
J Trauma. 1998 Mar;44(3):454-9. doi: 10.1097/00005373-199803000-00006.
Hemorrhage is a major cause of mortality in pelvic fractures. Bleeding can be controlled in hypotensive patients by direct ligation, angiographic embolization, pelvic packing, and acute external fixation. Acute application of an external fixator can reduce pelvic volume and reduce bleeding fractures to effect tamponade. This therapy assumes that the pelvis represents a closed space, which clearly is not true anatomically. However, the premise may hold functionally. This study explored the relationship between pressure and volume in the intact and disrupted pelvic retroperitoneum. In cadaveric specimens, the external iliac vein was dissected, ruptured, and cannulated. This method allowed controlled flow of fluid, with simultaneous measurement of pressure, into the intact retroperitoneum. Open book pelvic fractures were created by applying external rotation to the pelvis through the femoral heads. The pressure-volume measurements, without and with external fixation applied, were repeated after the fracture, as well as after a laparotomy. In the intact retroperitoneum, pressures rapidly rose to an average of 30 mm Hg after infusion of 5 liters of fluid. After fracture, up to 20 liters of fluid could be infused at pressures not exceeding 35 mm Hg. External fixation increased pressures approximately 3 mm Hg at low fluid volumes, and approximately 11 mm Hg at the highest fluid volumes. Laparotomy decreased retroperitoneal pressure from approximately 35 mm Hg to approximately 15 mm Hg. The results of the study suggest that low-pressure venous hemorrhage may be tamponaded by an external fixator, given that enough fluid volume is present in the pelvic retroperitoneum. However, external fixation may not generate sufficient pressure to stop arterial bleeding. In any case, it seems that a large volume of fluid must be lost into the pelvis before an external fixator can have much effect on retroperitoneal pressures.
出血是骨盆骨折致死的主要原因。对于低血压患者,可通过直接结扎、血管造影栓塞、盆腔填塞和急性外固定来控制出血。急性应用外固定器可减小盆腔容积,减少骨折出血以达到压迫止血的效果。该疗法假定骨盆为一个封闭空间,但从解剖学角度来看显然并非如此。然而,这一前提在功能上可能成立。本研究探讨了完整及破裂的盆腔腹膜后间隙压力与容积之间的关系。在尸体标本中,解剖、破裂并插管髂外静脉。该方法可控制液体流动,并同时测量进入完整腹膜后间隙的压力。通过股骨头对骨盆施加外旋来造成骨盆开放性骨折。在骨折后以及剖腹术后,分别在施加和未施加外固定的情况下重复进行压力-容积测量。在完整的腹膜后间隙中,注入5升液体后压力迅速升至平均30毫米汞柱。骨折后,在压力不超过35毫米汞柱的情况下可注入多达20升液体。在低液体量时,外固定使压力升高约3毫米汞柱,在最高液体量时升高约11毫米汞柱。剖腹术使腹膜后压力从约35毫米汞柱降至约15毫米汞柱。研究结果表明,若盆腔腹膜后间隙中有足够的液体量,外固定器可能对低压静脉出血起到压迫止血作用。然而,外固定可能无法产生足够压力来止住动脉出血。无论如何,似乎在大量液体流失到骨盆之前,外固定器对腹膜后压力的影响不大。