Lower urinary tract injuries in patients with pelvic fractures at a level 1 trauma center - an 11-year experience
Urological injuries can occur in patients with pelvic fractures. Treatment recommendations lack solid evidence and is often pragmatical. There is a continuous need to describe short- and long-term morbidity following lower urinary tract trauma. To describe incidence, diagnosis, treatment, and morbid...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scandinavian journal of urology 2023-11, Vol.57 (1-6), p.102-109 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Urological injuries can occur in patients with pelvic fractures. Treatment recommendations lack solid evidence and is often pragmatical. There is a continuous need to describe short- and long-term morbidity following lower urinary tract trauma.
To describe incidence, diagnosis, treatment, and morbidity following lower urinary tract injuries in pelvic fractures.
Retrospective study including patients with pelvic, including acetabular, fractures admitted to a Level I Trauma Centre covering 2.8 million citizens between 2009 and 2020. Outcome measurements comprised primary management, treatment trajectory, short- and long-term complications and outcomes.
A total of 39 (5%) patients with pelvic fractures had concomitant urethral and/or bladder injuries, and one patient with an acetabular fracture had a bladder injury. The management of urethral injuries varied vastly, and complete urethral ruptures were associated with severe short- and long-term complications. Only one patient with bladder injury experienced severe long-term complications.
Management of lower urinary tract injuries in patients with major pelvic fractures remains a major challenge. Special attention should be focused on urethral injuries where we uncovered an unsystematic treatment and follow-up even in a highly experienced centre, although this is also attributed to complicated multidisciplinary patient trajectories. There is a continuous need to reduce long-term complications following urethral trauma which should be addressed in multicenter studies. |
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ISSN: | 2168-1805 2168-1813 |
DOI: | 10.1080/21681805.2022.2141311 |