Abstract

BackgroundThe most common cause of death in cases of pelvic trauma is exsanguination caused by associated injuries, not the pelvic injury itself. For patients with relatively isolated pelvic trauma, the impact of vascular injury severity on outcome remains unclear. We hypothesized that the severity of the pelvic vascular injury plays a more decisive role in outcome than fracture pattern complexity.MethodsMedical records of patients with pelvic fracture at a single center between January 2016 and December 2017 were retrospectively reviewed. Those with an abbreviated injury scale (AIS) score ≥ 3 in areas other than the pelvis were excluded. Lateral compression (LC) type 1 fractures and anteroposterior compression (APC) type 1 fractures according to the Young-Burgess classification and ischial fractures were defined as simple pelvic fractures, while other fracture types were considered complicated pelvic fractures. Based on CT, vascular injury severity was defined as minor (fracture with or without hematoma) or severe (hematoma with contrast pooling/extravasation). Patient demographics, clinical parameters, and outcome measures were compared between the groups.ResultsSevere vascular injuries occurred in 26 of the 155 patients and were associated with poorer hemodynamics, a higher injury severity score (ISS), more blood transfusions, and a longer ICU stay (3.81 vs. 0.86 days, p = 0.000) and total hospital stay (20.7 vs. 10.1 days, p = 0.002) compared with minor vascular injuries. By contrast, those with complicated pelvic fractures (LC II/III, APC II/III, vertical shear, and combined type fracture) required a similar number of transfusions and had a similar length of ICU stay as those with simple pelvic fractures (LC I, APC I, and ischium fracture) but had a longer total hospital stay (13.6 vs. 10.3 days, p = 0.034). These findings were similar even if only patients with ISS ≥ 16 were considered.ConclusionsOur results indicate that even in patients with relatively isolated pelvic injuries, vascular injury severity is more closely correlated to the outcome than the type of anatomical fracture. Therefore, a more balanced classification of pelvic injury that takes both the fracture pattern and hemodynamic status into consideration, such as the WSES classification, seems to have better utility for clinical practice.

Highlights

  • The most common cause of death in cases of pelvic trauma is exsanguination caused by associated injuries, not the pelvic injury itself

  • All patients with a diagnosis of pelvic fracture were included in the study if they were older than 18 years old and did not have an abbreviated injury scale (AIS) score higher than 2 in any body region other than the pelvis

  • The majority of the patients (n = 117, 75.5%) were involved in a traffic accident, while 19 (12.3%) patients were injured due to a slip, 11 (7.1%) patients were injured by a fall, and 8 (5.2%) patients were crushed/rolled over by heavy objects or machines

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Summary

Introduction

The most common cause of death in cases of pelvic trauma is exsanguination caused by associated injuries, not the pelvic injury itself. We hypothesized that the severity of the pelvic vascular injury plays a more decisive role in outcome than fracture pattern complexity. Pelvic fracture is one of the most complex injuries in trauma care. These patients are usually young and have a high overall injury severity score (ISS). The anatomical fracture pattern is no doubt an important component determining the likelihood of significant vascular injury, the utility of the YB and Tile classification systems in predicting the need for blood transfusion and angiography in the initial resuscitation phase has shown mixed results [8,9,10,11]. There have been several studies supporting their predictability, but these results could not be consistently replicated across all of the studies [12,13,14]

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