Penetrating trauma to the carotid vessels

Over a 13 year period extending between April 1975 and June 1988, 510 neck injuries were treated at the American University of Beirut Medical Center; the carotid vessels were involved in 48 patients, resulting in 53 carotid injuries. The mean age of the patients was 25.3 years and shrapnel injuries...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of vascular surgery 1990-12, Vol.4 (6), p.607-610
Hauptverfasser: Khoury, Ghattas, Hajj, Hani, Jabbour Khoury, Samar, Basil, Amal, Speir, Roger
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Over a 13 year period extending between April 1975 and June 1988, 510 neck injuries were treated at the American University of Beirut Medical Center; the carotid vessels were involved in 48 patients, resulting in 53 carotid injuries. The mean age of the patients was 25.3 years and shrapnel injuries were the commonest (45.8%), followed by bullet wounds (33 %). Thirty-nine patients had a laceration and five had complete disruption of the carotid vessels and only three presented in coma. Shock was present in 14 patients, of whom five had a neurological deficit. In six the injured vessels were ligated, three of them were external carotid arteries. Nine patients were not initially operated on. Six of them had a chronic arterio-venous fistula and three were in coma. The remainder underwent surgical repair. Nine patients died, giving an overall mortality rate of 18.8%. Four of these died because of multisystem failure, thus giving a 10.4% mortality rate for the isolated carotid injury. There was definite improvement in the repaired group, but the haemodynamic status seemed to significantly affect the mortality rate ( P < 0.01). Follow-up of surviving patients has revealed five with persistent neurological deficits in the repaired group (33 patients), and four patients with a chronic arterio-venous fistula. Two patients had a false aneurysm. Carotid artery injury seems to have a good prognosis if repaired promptly within 3 h.
ISSN:0950-821X
DOI:10.1016/S0950-821X(05)80816-3