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Blunt Popliteal Artery Injury

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Blunt Popliteal Artery Injury. A 23-year-old ... Crush injuries with open tibial fractures likely to cause loss of the lower leg. ... When do you lose the leg? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Blunt Popliteal Artery Injury


1
Blunt Popliteal Artery Injury
2
A 23-year-old woman involved in a motor vehicle
crash with injuries that include
  • Closed head injury
  • Pelvic fracture
  • Multiple long-bone fractures
  • Extraperitoneal bladder injury
  • Decreased blood flow to right foot

3
Pule Exam
  • SITE Right Left
  • Fem 2/2 2/2
  • Pop dop 2/2
  • DP 0 2/2
  • PT Dop 2/2
  • Foot Cold Warm

4
Blunt Popliteal Injuries
1
5
Blunt Popliteal Injuries
  • Orthopedic Injuries
  • Distal Femur Fracture
  • Knee Dislocation
  • Proximal Tibia Fracture
  • Vascular Injuries
  • Blunt Trauma endothelial injury causing
    thrombus formation
  • Vasospasm

6
History
  • High amputation rates
  • WWII 72 amputation rate with ligation
  • Korean Conflict 32 amputation

7
Morbidity
  • Compartment syndrome
  • Limb survival is threatened by delays in
    diagnosis and treatment, particularly when limb
    perfusion is compromised for more than 6 hours.
  • Extensive musculoskeletal and skin injuries
    poor prognosis.
  • Crush injuries with open tibial fractures likely
    to cause loss of the lower leg.

8
Physical Exam Hard Signs
  • 91-95 sensitivity for injuries requiring
    intervention.
  • Bruit or thrill, suggests AV fistula
  • Active or pulsatile hemorrhage
  • Pulsatile or expanding hematoma
  • Signs of limb ischemia
  • Diminished or absent pulses
  • (patients with major vascular injuries
    requiring repair may have normal pulses distal to
    the injury)

9
Physical Exam Soft Signs
  • Much less useful predicting injuries requiring
    intervention.
  • Hypotension or shock
  • Neurological deficit
  • Stable or small hematoma
  • Proximity of the wound to major vascular
    structures

10
Etiology
  • Gunshot wounds, cause 70-80 of all vascular
    injuries requiring intervention.
  • Stab wounds (5-15 of cases)
  • Blunt trauma (5-10 of cases) Presence of
    fracture increases risk.
  • Iatrogenic injury (5 of cases) Cardiac
    catheterization and line placement

11
Evaluation
  • The arterial pressure index useful when pulses
    appear normal.
  • Systolic blood pressure in the affected extremity
    is divided by systolic pressure in the normal
    extremity.
  • lt 90 is abnormal.
  • Sensitivity 44-95, depending on circumstances,
    need intervention

12
Duplex Ultrasonography
  • Ultrasound promising noninvasive technique
  • Investigating injuries with a high-risk mechanism
    or location, but without any obvious indication
    for surgical management.
  • Sensitivity of ultrasound can be up to 95-100
    for diagnosing vascular injuries that lack hard
    signs but still require intervention with high
    index of suspicion.
  • Extremely operator dependent.
  • The negative predictive value as low as 50.

13
Angiography
  • Gold Standard for evaluation of vascular injuries
    in trauma.
  • Disadvantages include cost, time delay, and a
    0.6 major complication rate.
  • Only 1 to1.5 of angiograms in patients lacking
    hard signs will reveal injuries requiring
    intervention.

14
Treatment3
  • Prehospital Care
  • Stabilize the extremity in anatomic position.
  • Control hemorrhage with direct pressure.
  • Emergency Department Care
  • Immediately reduce displaced or angulated
    fractures of the elbow and knee to relieve
    tension on neurovascular structures.
  • Consult vascular and orthopedics

15
When do you lose the leg?
  • Harrell study no limbs were lost if pulse was
    detected or Doppler signal
  • Neither pulse nor doppler signal 14 of 23 limbs
    were lost
  • Severe soft tissue injury is a predisposing
    factor in limb loss 13 of 26 limbs lost

16
Knee Dislocation4
  • Sisk and King reviewed 61 acute dislocations
    21 had associated popliteal artery trauma
  • When suspected, arteriography and surgical
    exploration are mandatory
  • Observation only is often a disaster

17
Predictors of Amputation
  • Greater than 2 long bone fractures
  • Tibial arteries one, two, and three vessel
    injuries 20, 33, and 100 amp rates
  • Blunt injury
  • Pulseless extremity
  • Distal vacular injuries complex fracture
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