Admission or Observation Is Not Necessary after a Negative Abdominal Computed Tomographic Scan in Patients with Suspected Blunt Abdominal Trauma
- 1 February 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care
- Vol. 44 (2) , 273-282
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005373-199802000-00005
Abstract
Hospitalization for observation is the current standard of practice for patients who have sustained blunt abdominal trauma and who do not require emergent operation, despite having undergone diagnostic studies that exclude the presence of an intra-abdominal injury. The reasons for this practice are multifactorial and include the perceived false-negative rate of all standard diagnostic tests, the belief that hospitalization will allow for the prompt diagnosis of occult injuries, and medicolegal considerations about the risk of early discharge. The focus of this study was to determine whether hospitalization for observation is necessary after a negative diagnostic evaluation after blunt abdominal trauma, to determine the negative predictive value of abdominal computed tomographic (CT) scanning in a prospective series of patients, and to identify which patients can be safely released from the emergency department without observation or hospitalization after blunt abdominal trauma. In a prospective, multi-institutional study over 22 months at four Level I trauma centers, all patients with blunt abdominal trauma suspected by either physical examination or mechanism of injury were evaluated using the following protocol: physical examination in the emergency department, followed by abdominal CT scanning, followed by hospitalization for observation. The standardized physical examination was repeated between 4 and 8 hours. Outcomes were measured at 20 hours and at discharge and included clinical deterioration, the need for celiotomy, and mortality. Other data collected included demographics, mechanism of injury, and findings on physical examination and abdominal CT scanning. Three thousand eight hundred twenty-two consecutive patients with suspected abdominal trauma presented to the four trauma centers. Two thousand seven hundred seventy-four of these met study eligibility criteria and were prospectively enrolled. Of these, 2299 fulfilled the entire study protocol. CT scan was negative in 1,809 patients, positive for organ injury or abdominal fluid in 389 patients, and nondiagnostic in 78 patients. Abdominal tenderness or bruising was present in 1,380 patients (61%), but only 22% had a positive CT scan. Nineteen percent of patients with a positive CT scan had no tenderness. Computed tomography detected 22 of the 25 blunt intestinal injuries in this series. Free intraperitoneal fluid without solid visceral injury was present in 90 patients, and but only 7 patients had intestinal injuries. There were nine celiotomies in patients whose CT scan was initially interpreted as negative: six were therapeutic (intestine in three, bladder in one, kidney in one, and diaphragm in one), two were nontherapeutic, and one was negative. The negative predictive power of an abdominal CT scan based on the preliminary reading and as defined by the subsequent need for a celiotomy in the population fully satisfying the protocol was 99.63% (lower 95 and 99% confidence bounds of 99.31 and 99.16%, respectively). These data indicate that abdominal tenderness is not predictive of an abdominal injury and that patients with a negative CT scan after suspected blunt abdominal trauma do not benefit from hospital admission and prolonged observation.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Status of Nonoperative Management of Blunt Hepatic Injuries in 1995The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care, 1996
- Management of Blunt Splenic TraumaThe Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care, 1995
- CT in patients with blunt abdominal trauma: clinical significance of intraperitoneal fluid detected on a scan with otherwise normal findings.American Journal of Roentgenology, 1995
- ABGs and Arterial LinesPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1990
- Evaluation of Computed Tomography and Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage in Blunt Abdominal TraumaPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1989
- Gastrointestinal DisruptionPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1988
- A Prospective Study of 91 Patients Undergoing Both Computed Tomography and Peritoneal Lavage Following Blunt Abdominal TraumaPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1986
- Preventable Trauma DeathsJAMA, 1985
- Diagnostic peritoneal lavage: Fourteen years and 2,586 patients laterThe American Journal of Surgery, 1978
- Peritoneal lavage in blunt abdominal traumaThe American Journal of Surgery, 1973