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Myocardial Contusion in Blunt Trauma: Clinical Characteristics, Means of Diagnosis, and Implications for Patient Management

 

作者: TIMOTHY FABIAN,   EUGENE MANGIANTE,   C RICHARD PATTERSON,   LYNDA PAYNE,   MICHAEL ISAACSON,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care  (OVID Available online 1988)
卷期: Volume 28, issue 1  

页码: 50-57

 

ISSN:0022-5282

 

年代: 1988

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

The incidence, diagnosis, and impact on surgical management of myocardial contusion (MC) are incompletely defined. During a 12-month period, all patients admitted to a Level I trauma center with blunt trauma were prospectively evaluated for MC (n=1,110). Those with anterior chest wall contusions, sternal or anterior rib fractures, or pain/tenderness of the anterior chest (ra=140, 13%) underwent immediate and daily ECG, and CPK isoenzymes were measured at admission and every 6 hours in the first 24 hours. Eighty-nine of these patients underwent gated ventricular angiography (GVA) and 66 underwent two-dimensional echocardiography (2D ECHO). MC was considered present if either: 1) CPK-MB was ≥ 5% of total CPK, or 2) an abnormal admission ECG reverted to normal before patient discharge. Fifty six patients (5% of admissions, 40% of those with apparent chest trauma) were positive by one or both criteria. Thirty patients (54%) were positive by CPK alone, 23 (41%) by both CPK and ECG, and three (5%) by ECG alone. Of the 53 with elevated CPK-MB, 14 (26%) were normal on admission with the remainder becoming elevated in the first 24 hours. 2D ECHO was abnormal in only three of 21 positive patients (14%), and GVA was abnormal in only three of 40 positive patients (7%). Surgical procedures requiring general anesthesia were performed in 37 (66%) of the positive patients. No significant arrhythmias developed under general anesthesia.

 

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