Cases reported "Thoracic Injuries"

Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/96. Isolated fracture of the ventricular septum after blunt chest trauma.

    Isolated rupture of of the ventricular septum after blunt chest trauma is a very rare traumatic affection. A 21-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of blunt chest trauma and a forearm fracture. Initial echocardiography did not show any intracardiac or extracardiac pathologic lesions, but 12 hours later this examination was repeated because of the onset of a holosystolic murmur. An unusual traumatic rupture of the ventricular septum was demonstrated. The hemodynamically stable condition of the patient allowed surgical repair to be performed 3 months later.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = fracture
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/96. Fourteen shots for a suicide.

    A 56-year-old man is discovered unconscious in a pool of blood in the kitchen of his house. According to findings, the man used a 22 long Rifle to fire 14 shots at his thorax with trajectories going from front to back, from right to left and on a nearly horizontal level. All the projectiles got into the left front side of his thorax and came out just under the back of his left armpit. One of them then got through his left arm and fractured his left humerus. According to the findings made on the premises and the position of the bloodstains, we think that man put his rifle against the wall, resting on a pipe. He fired, unloading two clips into his thorax. He had to handle the bolt of the rifle before each shot. To reload, he took the bullets which were on the nearby table on which blood marks can be seen. When reloading at a certain moment, he sat down in his armchair and when he wanted to stand up, he leaned on the armrests, on which blood marks can be seen. The last bullet was probably the one which went through his left arm, preventing him from keeping on shooting. His death, caused by a hypovolemical shock, was obviously very slow.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.2
keywords = fracture
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/96. Blunt trauma with flail chest and penetrating aortic injury.

    Blunt chest trauma with flail chest is common. The mortality attributes initially to the associated pulmonary contusion, massive hemothorax and later to the occurrence of adult respiratory distress syndrome. We report a case of flail chest with segmental fractures near the costovertebral junction and delayed hemothorax attacked 14 h later. The final diagnosis of the penetrating aortic injury by detached rib fragment was appreciated by aortogram. Unfortunately, active aortic hemorrhage made prompt thoracotomy in vain for life salvage.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.2
keywords = fracture
(Clic here for more details about this article)

4/96. Characteristics of child abuse by anteroposterior manual compression versus cardiopulmonary resuscitation: case reports.

    Lethal and sublethal injuries to infants caused by anteroposterior manual compression can be accompanied by lateral rib fractures, hemorrhage into the viscera, and when severe, rupture of large vessels and solid organs. Abusers may claim that these injuries were sustained in an attempt to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The difference between injuries caused by CPR and injuries caused by inflicted anteroposterior compression is examined in one sublethal and two lethal cases.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.42676335322109
keywords = fracture, compression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

5/96. Delayed presentation of traumatic left-sided diaphragmatic avulsion. A case report.

    We describe the case of a 35-year-old man who had suffered a severe multitrauma with blunt thoracic injury, left scapula and humerus fractures 5 years earlier. At the time of the trauma, a diaphragmatic lesion went unnoticed. Five years later, the patient had a 24-h history of increasingly severe abdominal pain with repeated vomiting. Helical CT showed a portion of the left hemidiaphragm avulsed from its insertions on the ribs with large-bowel loop obstruction herniated in the left hemithorax. The preoperative CT diagnosis was confirmed by surgery: reduction of the hernia and reinsertion of the hemidiaphragm to the lumbocostal arch were performed.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.2
keywords = fracture
(Clic here for more details about this article)

6/96. Petechiae of the baby's skin as differentiation symptom of infanticide versus SIDS.

    The successive killing of three siblings by their biological mother at two-year intervals is described. The children were 367 days, 75 days and 3 years old. Although sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) or interstitial pneumonia could not be ruled out as the cause of death in the two younger children, who were killed first, the third child exhibited discrete signs of violence in the mouth and throat area which were interpreted as proof of infanticide. All three children had petechiae of the skin of the face and throat, the upper thorax, the shoulders and the mucous membranes of the mouth. None of the children exhibited signs of a disease-related hemorrhagic tendency. After the mother was convicted of murdering the three-year-old boy by smothering in combination with compression of the thorax, she confessed to having killed the other two children in a similar manner. In the absence of hemostatic disease, the presence of petechiae of the skin extending over the entire drainage area of the Vena cava superior can be regarded as evidence of an increase in pressure in the thoracic cavity secondary to obstruction of the airways with simultaneous chest compression.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.075587784407029
keywords = compression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

7/96. Disruption in the intrathoracic trachea due to blunt trauma.

    Intrathoracic tracheal disruption by blunt trauma is rare and potentially life threatening. Here report 3 cases of intrathoracic tracheal disruption due to blunt trauma. Two cases, each 43 year old, involved an unrestrained male driver who suffered a head-on crash, while the other, 63 year old, involved a male who suffered compression. Chest roentgenograms on admission showed remarkable deep cervical and mediastinal emphysema in Cases 1 and 2 and mediastinal emphysema alone in Case 3. bronchoscopy revealed disruption in the trachea. Primary repair was performed through a right posterolateral thoracotomy in Cases 1 and 3 and through a median sternotomy in Case 2. In all cases the postoperative course was uneventful.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.037793892203514
keywords = compression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

8/96. Traumatic asphyxia complicated by unwitnessed cardiac arrest.

    We report a case of traumatic asphyxia complicated by unwitnessed cardiac arrest in which the patient has made a good, functional recovery. Traumatic asphyxia is an uncommon clinical syndrome usually occurring after chest compression. Associated physical findings include subconjunctival hemorrhage and purple-blue neck and face discoloration. These facial changes can mimic those seen with massive closed head injury; however, cerebral injury after traumatic asphyxia usually occurs due to cerebral hypoxia. When such features are observed, the diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia should be considered. Prompt treatment with attention to the reestablishment of oxygenation and perfusion may result in good outcomes.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.037793892203514
keywords = compression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

9/96. Bronchial repair with pulmonary preservation for severe blunt trauma.

    After a motorcycle accident, a 22-year-old male was diagnosed with multiple rib fractures, left-sided tension pneumothorax, hemothorax and left upper lobe bronchus rupture at its origin. An emergency left thoracotomy revealed an almost complete avulsion of the upper lobe bronchus from the main stem bronchus, a severely damaged pulmonary artery, and a concurrent deep intraparenchymal lower lobe laceration. Since the patient was hemodynamically stable, a decision was made to preserve as much lung as possible. In the event of complex pulmonary trauma, pulmonary preservation is desirable since emergency pneumonectomy is usually associated with high mortality. Early bronchoscopic assessment, careful anesthetic management, and meticulous surgical technique with liberal use of fibrin glue were crucial to successful outcome.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.2
keywords = fracture
(Clic here for more details about this article)

10/96. Extrapericardial cardiac tamponade caused by traumatic retrosternal hematoma.

    cardiac tamponade is an uncommon complication of blunt chest trauma, resulting typically from hemorrhage into the pericardial space. We report a case of hemodynamic compromise secondary to an extrapericardial compression caused by the acute formation of a retrosternal hematoma associated with a sternal fracture. The patient was involved in a violent deceleration accident. Initially, he only complained of an anterior thoracic pain, but subsequently became restless, pale, and dyspneic. A severe hypotension associated with sinus bradycardia (45 bpm) rapidly occurred. Both jugular veins became markedly turgescent, but no significant pulsus paradoxus was noted. echocardiography disclosed a large hematoma, compressing anteriorly both the right ventricular cavity and outflow tract. Surgical evacuation of the retrosternal hematoma related to a bifocal fracture of the manubrium was followed by instantaneous hemodynamic improvement. Regional extrapericardial tamponade secondary to the acute formation of compressive retrosternal hematoma is an unusual cause of circulatory failure after severe blunt chest trauma. Since conventional clinical signs associated with typical tamponade physiology may be lacking in this setting, echocardiography is ideally suited for early recognition of this unusual condition.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.43779389220351
keywords = fracture, compression
(Clic here for more details about this article)
| Next ->


Leave a message about 'Thoracic Injuries'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.