LIVER TRAUMA

Abstract
A series of 97 patients has been studied who were treated for liver injury at Westmead Hospital between January 1979 and January 1985. Patients were noted to be younger than those reported in previous series from Sydney, and to have suffered more frequent, significant, head injuries. Paramedical roadside intervention probably allowed more patients to reach hospital alive than was the case before the advent of the Intensive Care Ambulance system. Improved organ imaging has allowed more confident non-operative management of 13% of patients. Hepatic resection has been used infrequently (10%). Packing has been used in six patients as part of the definitive treatment of severe injuries and coagulopathy, and to allow the transfer of a further seven patients from peripheral hospitals. Ten of these 13 patients survived. Head injury continues to be a major cause of death in these patients. Death from the liver injury itself is usually associated with high grade damage to the liver and the associated hepatic veins and vena cava. It is speculated that improvement in the management of these lethal injuries will come about only from the early identification of patients likely to have suffered such trauma, and the pre-operative control of bleeding. Balloon catheter placement under radiological control, to tamponade the inferior vena cava and abdominal aorta, is suggested as one means by which this goal might be achieved.