dc.creatorPereira, Bruno Monteiro Tavares
dc.creatorde Campos, Caio César Citatini
dc.creatorCalderan, Thiago Rodrigues Araujo
dc.creatorReis, Leonardo Oliveira
dc.creatorFraga, Gustavo Pereira
dc.date2013-Aug
dc.date2015-11-27T13:31:11Z
dc.date2015-11-27T13:31:11Z
dc.date.accessioned2018-03-29T01:16:59Z
dc.date.available2018-03-29T01:16:59Z
dc.identifierWorld Journal Of Urology. v. 31, n. 4, p. 913-7, 2013-Aug.
dc.identifier1433-8726
dc.identifier10.1007/s00345-012-0871-8
dc.identifierhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22544337
dc.identifierhttp://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/200423
dc.identifier22544337
dc.identifier.urihttp://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/1300656
dc.descriptionReport 20 years experience of bladder injuries after external trauma. Gender, age, mechanism/location of damage, associated injuries, systolic blood pressure (SBP), Revised Trauma Score (RTS), Injury Severity Score (ISS), Trauma Injury Severity Score (TRISS), complications, and length of stay (LOS) were analyzed in a prospective collected bladder injuries AAST-OIS grade ≥ II database (American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Organ Injury Scaling) from 1990 to 2009 in a trauma reference center. Among 2,575 patients experiencing laparotomy for trauma, 111 (4.3 %) presented bladder ruptures grade ≥ II, being 83.8 % (n = 93) males, mean age 31.5 years old (± 11.2). Blunt mechanism accounted for 50.5 % (n = 56)-motor vehicle crashes 47.3 % (n = 26), pedestrians hit by a car (29.1 %). Gunshot wounds represented 87.3 % of penetrating mechanism. The most frequent injury was grade IV (51 patients, 46 %). The mean ISS was 23.8 (± 11.2), TRISS 0.90 (± 0.24), and RTS 7.26 (± 1.48). Severity (AAST-OIS), mechanism (blunt/penetrating), localization of the bladder injury (intra/extraperitoneal, associated), and neither concomitant rectum lesion were related to complications, LOS, or death. Mortality rate was 10.8 %. ISS > 25 (p = 0.0001), SBP <90 mmHg (p = 0.0001), RTS <7.84 (p = 0.0001), and pelvic fracture (p = 0.0011) were highly associated with grim prognosis and death with hazard ratios of 5.46, 2.70, 2.22, and 2.06, respectively. Trauma scores and pelvic fractures impact survival in bladder trauma. The mortality rate has remained stable for the last two decades.
dc.description31
dc.description913-7
dc.languageeng
dc.relationWorld Journal Of Urology
dc.relationWorld J Urol
dc.rightsfechado
dc.rights
dc.sourcePubMed
dc.subjectAdult
dc.subjectCross-sectional Studies
dc.subjectFemale
dc.subjectFractures, Bone
dc.subjectHumans
dc.subjectLongitudinal Studies
dc.subjectMale
dc.subjectPelvic Bones
dc.subjectPrognosis
dc.subjectProspective Studies
dc.subjectRetrospective Studies
dc.subjectSurvival Rate
dc.subjectTrauma Severity Indices
dc.subjectUrinary Bladder
dc.subjectWounds And Injuries
dc.titleBladder Injuries After External Trauma: 20 Years Experience Report In A Population-based Cross-sectional View.
dc.typeArtículos de revistas


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