ISSN 0303-5212
 

Original Research 


Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik.

Abstract
Objective: Purpose of our study is to describe the pattern of visceral injuries in penetrating trauma patients, their association with entry wounds and to observe the outcome of patients after surgical intervention. Patients and Method: This study included 79 patients with abdominal trauma who presented in the Accident and Emergency department of Civil hospital Karachi and underwent exploratory laparotomy from October 2011 to April 2013. A proforma was used to document patientÂ’s demography, findings and final outcome. Results: Most patients were in the age group of 21 to 30 years (42.7%). 76 (96.2%) patients were male and 3 patients were female. Most entry wounds were found on ventral abdominal wall (57%), involving the left upper quadrant in majority (31.6%) of patients. Intra-abdominal injuries, included liver (n = 14, 17.7%), spleen (n = 12, 15.2%), kidney (n = 4, 5.1%), pancreas (n = 4, 5.1%), stomach (n = 12, 15.2%), small bowel (n = 34, 43%) and large bowel (n = 35, 44.3%). 41 patients have multiple organ injury. Associated injuries were present in 50.6% cases. Postoperative complication recorded were wound infection 30.4%, wound dehiscence 6.3%, abdominal sepsis 3.8% and mortality in 8 (10.1%) patients. Average hospital stay was 8 days. Conclusion: This study has highlighted that the pattern of visceral injuries can be predictable in fire arm trauma patients even before exploration. The entry wound, clinical stability and the surface area of visceral organs are the major determinants in predicting pattern of visceral involvement.

Key words: Penetrating trauma, abdominal injury, abdominal sepsis.


 
ARTICLE TOOLS
Abstract
PDF Fulltext
How to cite this articleHow to cite this article
Citation Tools
Related Records
 Articles by Anis Uz Zaman
Articles by Muhammad Iqbal
Articles by Farhan Zaheer
Articles by Rehan Abbas Khan
Articles by Khalid Ahsan Malik
on Google
on Google Scholar

How to Cite this Article
Pubmed Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. RMJ. 2014; 39(1): 68-71.


Web Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. https://www.rmj.org.pk/?mno=39849 [Access: December 07, 2023].


AMA (American Medical Association) Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. RMJ. 2014; 39(1): 68-71.



Vancouver/ICMJE Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. RMJ. (2014), [cited December 07, 2023]; 39(1): 68-71.



Harvard Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik (2014) Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. RMJ, 39 (1), 68-71.



Turabian Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. 2014. Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. Rawal Medical Journal, 39 (1), 68-71.



Chicago Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. "Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience." Rawal Medical Journal 39 (2014), 68-71.



MLA (The Modern Language Association) Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik. "Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience." Rawal Medical Journal 39.1 (2014), 68-71. Print.



APA (American Psychological Association) Style

Anis Uz Zaman, Muhammad Iqbal, Farhan Zaheer, Rehan Abbas Khan, Khalid Ahsan Malik (2014) Penetrating abdominal injury: A tertiary care hospital experience. Rawal Medical Journal, 39 (1), 68-71.