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Abstract

Objective

Our objective was to show that a chest X-ray (CXR) and an abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan are sufficient to identify most clinically significant thoracic injuries in trauma patients, rendering the thoracic CT scan useful in only a subset of patients.

Methods

A retrospective study identified thoracic injuries in 374 trauma patients evaluated with a CXR, a thoracic CT scan, and an abdominal CT scan. Injuries seen on the initial CXR versus those seen on a CT scan only (occult) were identified and assessed for clinical relevance.

Results

An abdominal CT scan identified 65% (15/23) of occult pneumothoraces, 100% (25/25) of occult hemothoraces, 64% (18/28) of occult pulmonary contusions, and 58% (18/31) of occult rib fractures. No occult pneumothoraces seen on the thoracic CT scan alone required tube thoracostomy.

Conclusions

Our pilot study suggests that a CXR and an abdominal CT scan will identify most occult intrathoracic injuries. Reserving a thoracic CT scan for patients with an abnormal CXR or high-risk mechanism could safely reduce cost and radiation exposure while still diagnosing significant thoracic injuries.

Details

Title
Ability of a chest X-ray and an abdominal computed tomography scan to identify traumatic thoracic injury
Author
Barrios, Cristobal; Pham, Jacqueline; Malinoski, Darren; Dolich, Matthew; Lekawa, Michael; Cinat, Marianne
Pages
741-745
Section
The Southwestern Surgical Congress
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Dec 1, 2010
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
00029610
e-ISSN
18791883
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1925197896
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Dec 1, 2010