Chapter 115 Abdominal Trauma in Pediatric Critical Care
Trauma is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the pediatric age group. An estimated 1.5 million pediatric injuries occur each year, resulting in 500,000 hospitalizations and 20,000 deaths.1 Thus trauma exceeds all other causes of death combined. Abdominal injuries are a marker of severe trauma, and evaluation of the child with an abdominal injury must include a thorough examination of the entire child. Failure to accurately assess the abdomen is the single most common error in the early treatment of the injured patient. Management of pediatric trauma requires a multidisciplinary approach with emergency department physicians, critical care specialists, anesthesiologists, and surgeons working as a multidisciplinary team to provide prompt stabilization, assessment, and treatment. Performing the primary and secondary survey, instituting fluid resuscitation, and arriving at a decision as to the most appropriate management plan are the principal goals of the trauma team leader.
Mechanisms and Patterns of Injury
Penetrating Abdominal Trauma
A national decrease in violent crime has reduced the incidence of penetrating trauma since the 1980s. Penetrating abdominal injuries are most commonly caused by firearm use or stabbings. In children, abdominal gunshot wounds result in more severe injuries than stab wounds because of the increased energy delivered by firearms, particularly shotguns and military rifles.2 Significant intraperitoneal injuries are present in most children who sustain gunshot wounds, suggesting the need for abdominal exploration in all gunshot victims. There is a controversial trend toward selective exploration of penetrating injuries in adults. For example, computed tomography has been successfully used to determine the use of selective laparotomy in penetrating torso trauma.3 However, most trauma centers continue to perform mandatory laparotomy on all patients with gunshot wounds to the abdomen, although some nontherapeutic explorations will occur. Abdominal stab wounds that are found to penetrate the transversalis fascia on local wound exploration should undergo laparotomy or laparoscopy. Expectant observation of stab wounds in children should rarely be applied because the true extent of injury is not always appreciated on local exploration.
Recreational and Sports Injury
Specific recreational activities commonly practiced by children, such as bicycling, all-terrain vehicle (ATV) use, skiing, snowboarding, and horseback riding result in predictable injury patterns that guide evaluation. Snowboard injuries are increasing and include abdominal injuries in 25% of cases.4 ATV crashes produce a particularly damaging pattern of injury as the ATV has the weight of a car and the lack of protection of a motorcycle. This results in a combination of an ejection and rollover mechanism of injury with the worst of both. The majority of deaths involve head and spine injuries. Lack of helmet use is associated with a higher mortality. ATV abdominal injuries include crush injuries to liver, spleen, and kidney. Child drivers are more susceptible to crash and it is alarming that child-sized ATVs are in production. Even where laws restrict ATV use by children, they are frequently injured and have a high rate of missed injuries.5 Blunt impalement on a bicycle handlebar can result in a predictable pattern of injury to bowel, mesentery, or pancreas.
Wartime Trauma
It is unfortunate to note that children can also be victims of wartime trauma causing abdominal and other injuries. In contrast to wars of the past, modern warfare is often conducted in urban areas with a civilian population present and the frequent involvement of children. Additionally, medical infrastructure is disrupted in a war zone and many residents suffer malnutrition and infections which makes them more debilitated in the face of a new injury. Military high-energy rifles cause penetrating wounds in which the pressure wave of the projectile results in a cone of tissue destruction. In abdominal injuries, this necessitates wide debridement of soft tissues, and often a second-look laparotomy is required to detect evolving intestinal necrosis. It is common for children to suffer blast and fragmentation injuries from land mines, bombs, indirect fire weapons (rockets and mortars), improvised explosive devices, and suicide bombings.6 Land mines and air-delivered cluster bomblets are particularly insidious because their interesting colors and shapes attract children’s curiosity. Wounds include pressure wave blunt injury, shrapnel penetration, and burns. These injuries in children often require a damage-control laparotomy, wide debridement of soft tissues, temporary abdominal closure, and multiple operations. Vacuum-assisted wound dressings are particularly useful.7 Wide-bore feeding tubes allow improvised feeds such as eggs, milk, honey, and grains. Long hospital stays are needed to ensure that the child can survive at home with little medical attention.
Evaluation and Resuscitation
Radiographic Assessment
Prompt plain radiographs of the chest, lateral cervical spine, and pelvis should be obtained during the initial assessment. Patients who are hemodynamically stable may undergo further radiographic workup, while patients with evidence of an abdominal injury who remain clinically unstable after resuscitation with 40 mL/kg of fluid should be taken to the operating room for exploration.
Computed Tomography
Computed tomography is the procedure of choice for definitive radiographic assessment after blunt abdominal trauma in children. Clinical impression remains the most sensitive indicator of the need for computed tomography. Computed tomography can be used to identify hepatic, splenic, intestinal, pancreatic, renal, and bladder injuries in children and can even detect intestinal and mesenteric injury with sensitivities of 94% and 96%, respectively.8 Serial clinical assessments must be made before computed tomography. If the patient deteriorates, stabilization in the PICU or immediate operative intervention must be considered. Findings on computed tomography suggestive of intestinal injury are unexplained free fluid without solid visceral organ disruption, abnormal distribution of bowel loops, contrast extravasation, and contrast enhancement of intestinal wall.9 The Organ Injury Scaling Committee of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma has developed a grading system to estimate the extent of abdominal injury.10,11 Short of operative exploration, computed tomography is the most accurate method used to grade the extent of injury.
Sonography
FAST is a rapid, noninvasive, and portable method to evaluate the abdomen. Various reports note that sonography for abdominal trauma has a sensitivity of 55% to 86% and a specificity of 95% to 98%.12–14 Sonography accurately identifies intraperitoneal free fluid, but it does not accurately identify the source of that fluid. Sonography is comparable to diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) as a method for detecting free peritoneal fluid, but is less invasive. However, it does not supplant computed tomography in its ability to define the specific nature and extent of abdominal injury.
Additional Assessment Tools
Diagnostic Peritoneal Lavage
Refinement in the nonoperative management of pediatric abdominal trauma makes DPL unnecessary in stable patients, because the presence of free intraperitoneal blood is not an absolute indication for surgery in children. In addition, performing a DPL can be difficult in small children due to the decreased domain of the smaller abdomen. However, DPL is a useful triage tool for selectively applying laparotomy for blunt intestinal trauma in children. In one series, the cell count, amylase activity, and particulate matter in the DPL specimen were able to identify small bowel perforation with a sensitivity of 100%.15
Diagnostic Laparoscopy
Diagnostic video-assisted laparoscopic evaluation has been suggested as a safe and effective modality for evaluating the abdomen in the stable patient after penetrating trauma. Diaphragmatic injuries can be diagnosed and repaired laparoscopically.16 Alternatively, thoracoscopy in hemodynamically stable penetrating-trauma patients can be used to avoid nontherapeutic laparotomy by ruling out penetration of the abdominal cavity and can identify thoracic and diaphragmatic injuries.