Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma

A pelvic fracture with entrapment of the urinary bladder in the fracture site is a rare pattern of injury. As the “team captains” in the trauma bay and in the care of polytraumatized patients, trauma surgeons must be aware of this entity and its implications. We report a case of acute bladder entrap...

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Main Authors: Derek S. Stenquist, Tyler J. Chavez, Michael J. Weaver
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:Trauma Case Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352644019300330
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spelling doaj-968eac02fffb468a88c99d15e22cdf6e2020-11-24T21:30:36ZengElsevierTrauma Case Reports2352-64402019-06-0121Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic traumaDerek S. Stenquist0Tyler J. Chavez1Michael J. Weaver2Harvard Combined Orthopedic Residency Program, Brigham and Women's Hospital, United States of America; Corresponding author at: Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115, United States of America.Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA 02115, United States of AmericaHarvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital, United States of America; Orthopaedic Trauma, Brigham and Women's Hospital, United States of AmericaA pelvic fracture with entrapment of the urinary bladder in the fracture site is a rare pattern of injury. As the “team captains” in the trauma bay and in the care of polytraumatized patients, trauma surgeons must be aware of this entity and its implications. We report a case of acute bladder entrapment in the fracture site of a lateral compression pelvic fracture. A review of the English literature yielded four previous reports, including two patients with delayed diagnosis (Ghuman et al., 2014; Kumar et al., 1980; Wright and Taitsman, 1996; Min et al., 2010 [1–4]).Kumar and colleagues first documented bladder entrapment by a pelvic fracture in 1980 (Kumar et al., 1980 [2]). Ghuman et al. described a similar case treated with fixation of the pelvic fracture (Ghuman et al., 2014 [1]). Wright and colleagues treated a patient with bladder perforation due to entrapment diagnosed two weeks after a pelvic ring fracture (Wright and Taitsman, 1996 [3]). In this case the bladder injury was repaired, but internal fixation of the pelvis fracture was avoided due to fear of contamination. Finally, Min et al. documented a case of bladder entrapment and perforation presenting six months after non-operative management of a pelvic ring fracture. The female patient developed recurrent UTIs and dyspareunia, and imaging revealed fracture malunion with the bladder entrapped in the fracture site (Min et al., 2010 [4]).This collection of case reports demonstrates the potential for acute or delayed bladder injury even in seemingly benign pelvic fractures. A high index of suspicion is required to intervene and prevent morbidity from bladder injuries in pelvic trauma. Entrapment of the bladder may require surgical intervention even when the injury pattern would not normally dictate surgery for the pelvis or bladder alone (Bryk and Zhao, 2016 [5]). We describe the diagnosis and surgical management of bladder entrapment and present a brief review of bladder injuries associated with pelvic fractures. Keywords: Trauma surgery, Pelvic fracture, Bladder entrapment, Pelvic trauma, Genitourinary traumahttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352644019300330
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Derek S. Stenquist
Tyler J. Chavez
Michael J. Weaver
spellingShingle Derek S. Stenquist
Tyler J. Chavez
Michael J. Weaver
Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
Trauma Case Reports
author_facet Derek S. Stenquist
Tyler J. Chavez
Michael J. Weaver
author_sort Derek S. Stenquist
title Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
title_short Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
title_full Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
title_fullStr Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
title_full_unstemmed Entrapment of the urinary bladder: A rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
title_sort entrapment of the urinary bladder: a rare mechanism of bladder injury in pelvic trauma
publisher Elsevier
series Trauma Case Reports
issn 2352-6440
publishDate 2019-06-01
description A pelvic fracture with entrapment of the urinary bladder in the fracture site is a rare pattern of injury. As the “team captains” in the trauma bay and in the care of polytraumatized patients, trauma surgeons must be aware of this entity and its implications. We report a case of acute bladder entrapment in the fracture site of a lateral compression pelvic fracture. A review of the English literature yielded four previous reports, including two patients with delayed diagnosis (Ghuman et al., 2014; Kumar et al., 1980; Wright and Taitsman, 1996; Min et al., 2010 [1–4]).Kumar and colleagues first documented bladder entrapment by a pelvic fracture in 1980 (Kumar et al., 1980 [2]). Ghuman et al. described a similar case treated with fixation of the pelvic fracture (Ghuman et al., 2014 [1]). Wright and colleagues treated a patient with bladder perforation due to entrapment diagnosed two weeks after a pelvic ring fracture (Wright and Taitsman, 1996 [3]). In this case the bladder injury was repaired, but internal fixation of the pelvis fracture was avoided due to fear of contamination. Finally, Min et al. documented a case of bladder entrapment and perforation presenting six months after non-operative management of a pelvic ring fracture. The female patient developed recurrent UTIs and dyspareunia, and imaging revealed fracture malunion with the bladder entrapped in the fracture site (Min et al., 2010 [4]).This collection of case reports demonstrates the potential for acute or delayed bladder injury even in seemingly benign pelvic fractures. A high index of suspicion is required to intervene and prevent morbidity from bladder injuries in pelvic trauma. Entrapment of the bladder may require surgical intervention even when the injury pattern would not normally dictate surgery for the pelvis or bladder alone (Bryk and Zhao, 2016 [5]). We describe the diagnosis and surgical management of bladder entrapment and present a brief review of bladder injuries associated with pelvic fractures. Keywords: Trauma surgery, Pelvic fracture, Bladder entrapment, Pelvic trauma, Genitourinary trauma
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352644019300330
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