Blunt Trauma Abdomen (BTA)
Definition
Blunt abdominal trauma (BTA) refers to non-penetrating injury to abdominal organs due to external force, commonly from:
- Road traffic accidents (most common in India)
- Falls from height
- Assaults
- Crush injuries
Mechanisms of Injury
1. Deceleration Injury
- Sudden stop → organs continue moving → shearing forces
- Common:
- Liver & spleen tears
- Mesenteric injury
- Aortic injury
2. Compression Injury
- External force compresses organs against spine
- Common:
- Pancreatic injury
- Hollow viscus perforation
3. Blast Injury
- Rare in civilian practice
- Causes combined barotrauma + blunt injury
Anatomical Classification
Solid Organ Injury
- Liver (most common overall)
- Spleen (most common requiring surgery)
- Kidney
- Pancreas
Feature: Bleeding → hemoperitoneum
Hollow Viscus Injury
7
- Stomach, small bowel, colon
- Bladder
Feature: Peritonitis, sepsis
Retroperitoneal Injury
- Duodenum, pancreas, kidneys, aorta
Feature: Occult → late diagnosis → high mortality
Primary Survey
Follow ABCDE approach:
A — Airway + C-spine protection
B — Breathing
C — Circulation (MOST IMPORTANT in BTA)
- Control hemorrhage
- 2 large-bore IV lines
- Massive transfusion protocol (1:1:1 ratio)
D — Disability (GCS)
E — Exposure (look for signs)
Key Clinical Signs
External Clues
- Seat belt sign → high risk of bowel injury
- Abdominal distension
- Ecchymosis (Grey Turner, Cullen’s → retroperitoneal bleed)
Internal Clues
- Hypotension → hemorrhagic shock
- Guarding/rigidity → peritonitis
- Hematuria → renal injury
Investigations
1. FAST / E-FAST (FIRST LINE in unstable patient)
- Detects free fluid (blood)
- Views:
- Morrison pouch
- Splenorenal
- Pelvis
- Pericardium
FAST positive + shock → Immediate laparotomy
2. CECT Abdomen (GOLD STANDARD in stable patient)
- Identifies:
- Organ injury grading (AAST)
- Active bleeding (“contrast blush”)
- Retroperitoneal injury
3. Labs
- Hb (trend more important than single value)
- Lactate → tissue perfusion
- ABG → metabolic acidosis
- Coagulation profile (trauma-induced coagulopathy)
4. DPL (Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage)
- Rare now
- Used if FAST unavailable
- “Shock in trauma = bleeding until proven otherwise”
- FAST is not for diagnosis, but for decision-making
- CT scan is useless in unstable patient
- Splenic injury → try to preserve spleen
- Seat belt sign = suspect bowel injury
Management Algorithm
🔴 Hemodynamically UNSTABLE
Definition:
- SBP < 90 mmHg OR ongoing shock
Approach:
- FAST:
- Positive → Immediate laparotomy
- Negative → look for other sources (chest, pelvis)
🟢 Hemodynamically STABLE- Do CECT
If Solid Organ Injury:
- Non-operative management (NOM) (standard of care)
- ICU monitoring
- Serial Hb
- Bed rest
Indications for intervention:
- Active bleed → angioembolization
- Hemodynamic deterioration → surgery
If Hollow Viscus Injury:
- Surgery is mandatory
- Exploratory laparotomy
Damage Control Surgery (DCS)
Indications:
- Hypothermia (<35°C)
- Acidosis (pH < 7.2)
- Coagulopathy
“Lethal Triad”
Steps:
- Control bleeding
- Temporary closure
- ICU resuscitation
- Definitive surgery later
Massive Transfusion Protocol (MTP)
- Ratio:
- PRBC : FFP : Platelets = 1 : 1 : 1
- Use:
- Tranexamic acid (within 3 hrs; CRASH-2 trial)
Indications for Laparotomy
- Hemodynamic instability + FAST positive
- Peritonitis
- Free air (perforation)
- Evisceration
- Ongoing bleeding despite resuscitation
Summary Table
|
Scenario |
Best Next Step |
|
Unstable + FAST + |
Immediate laparotomy |
|
Unstable + FAST – |
Search other bleeding source |
|
Stable patient |
CECT abdomen |
|
Solid organ injury (stable) |
NOM |
|
Hollow viscus injury |
Surgery |
