The role of nephrectomy in the acutely injured

Citation
Jc. Digiacomo et al., The role of nephrectomy in the acutely injured, ARCH SURG, 136(9), 2001, pp. 1045-1049
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery,"Medical Research Diagnosis & Treatment
Journal title
ARCHIVES OF SURGERY
ISSN journal
00040010 → ACNP
Volume
136
Issue
9
Year of publication
2001
Pages
1045 - 1049
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-0010(200109)136:9<1045:TRONIT>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Hypothesis: The high mortality in patients who undergo nephrectomy after tr auma is not secondary to the nephrectomy itself but is the consequence of a more severe constellation of injuries associated with renal injuries that require operative intervention. Design: A retrospective review of all patients identified using Internation al Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision codes as having sustained ren al injuries over a 62-month period. Patients: Seventy-eight patients with renal injuries who underwent explorat ory laparotomy were identified. Methods: All medical records were reviewed for patient management, definiti ve care, and outcome. Based on outcome, patients were assigned to either th e survivor or non-survivor group. For patients who underwent nephrectomy, i ntraoperative core temperature changes, estimated blood loss, and operative time were also reviewed. Results: Seventy-eight patients with renal injuries who underwent explorato ry laparotomy were identified. Twenty-nine patients underwent laparotomy wi th conservative management of the renal injury, of whom 5 (17.2%) died. Twe lve patients had renal injuries repaired and all survived. Thirty-seven pat ients underwent nephrectomy, of whom 16 (43.2%) died. Compared with nephrec tomy survivors, nephrectomy nonsurvivors had a significantly lower initial systolic blood pressure, higher Injury Severity Score, higher incidence of extra-abdominal injuries, shorter operative duration, and higher estimated operative blood loss. The nephrectomy survivors' core temperature increased a mean of 0.5 degreesC in the operating room, while the nephrectomy nonsur vivors' core temperature cooled a mean of 0.8 degreesC. Conclusions: Patients who undergo trauma nephrectomy tend to be severely in jured and hemodynamically unstable and warrant nephrectomy as part of the d amage control paradigm. That a high percentage of patients die after nephre ctomy for trauma demonstrates the severity of the overall constellation of injury and is not a consequence of the nephrectomy itself.