Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study

Abstract Background The abdomen is one of the most commonly injured regions in trauma patients. Abdominal injury surgeries are common in Tanzania and in many parts of the world. This study aimed to determine the relationships among the causes, characteristics, patterns and outcomes of abdominal inju...

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Main Authors: Shilanaiman Hilary Ntundu, Ayesiga M. Herman, Alfred Kishe, Heri Babu, Ola F. Jahanpour, David Msuya, Samuel G. Chugulu, Kondo Chilonga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:BMC Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12893-019-0530-8
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spelling doaj-b2399fe9d8824dd1be6fc78c3913be292020-11-25T02:47:51ZengBMCBMC Surgery1471-24822019-06-0119111010.1186/s12893-019-0530-8Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational studyShilanaiman Hilary Ntundu0Ayesiga M. Herman1Alfred Kishe2Heri Babu3Ola F. Jahanpour4David Msuya5Samuel G. Chugulu6Kondo Chilonga7Department of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreDepartment of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreDepartment of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreDepartment of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreSchool of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Catholic University of Health and Allied SciencesDepartment of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreDepartment of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreDepartment of General surgery, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical CentreAbstract Background The abdomen is one of the most commonly injured regions in trauma patients. Abdominal injury surgeries are common in Tanzania and in many parts of the world. This study aimed to determine the relationships among the causes, characteristics, patterns and outcomes of abdominal injury patients undergoing operations at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre. Methods A prospective observational study was performed over a period of 1 year from August 2016 to August 2017. A case was defined as a trauma patient with abdominal injuries admitted to the general surgery department and undergoing an operation. We assessed injury types, patterns, aetiologies and outcomes within 30 days. The outcomes were post-operative complications and mortality. Multivariate logistic regression was used to explore the association between factors associated with morbidity and mortality. Results Out of 136 patients, 115 (84.6%) were male, with a male-to-female ratio of 5.5:1. The most affected patients were in the age range of 21–40 years old, which accounted for 67 patients (49.3%), with a median age (IQR) of 31.5 (21.3–44.8) years. A majority (99 patients; 72.8%) had blunt abdominal injury, with a blunt-to-penetrating ratio of 2.7:1. The most common cause of injury was road traffic accidents (RTAs; 73 patients; 53.7%). Commonly injured organs in blunt and penetrating injuries were, respectively, the spleen (33 patients; 91.7%) and small bowel (12 patients; 46.1%). Most patients (89; 65.4%) had associated extra-abdominal injuries. Post-operative complications were observed in 57 patients (41.9%), and the mortality rate was 18 patients (13.2%). In the univariate analysis, the following were significantly associated with mortality: associated extra-abdominal injury (odds ratio (OR): 4.9; P-value< 0.039); head injury (OR: 4.4; P-value < 0.005); pelvic injury (OR: 3.9; P-value< 0.043); length of hospital stay (LOS) ≥ 7 days (OR: 4.2; P-value < 0.022); severe injury on the New Injury Severity Score (NISS) (OR: 21.7; P-value < 0.003); time > 6 h from injury to admission (OR: 4.4; P-value < 0.025); systolic BP < 90 (OR: 3.5; P-value < 0.015); and anaemia (OR: 4.7; P-value< 0.006). After adjustment, the following significantly predicted mortality: severe injury on the NISS (17 patients; 25.8%; adjusted odds ratio (aOR): 15.5, 95% CI: 1.5–160, P-value < 0.02) and time > 6 h from injury to admission (15 patients; 19.2%; aOR: 4.3, 95% CI: 1.0–18.9, P-value < 0.05). Conclusion Blunt abdominal injury was common and mostly associated with RTAs. Associated extra-abdominal injury, injury to the head or pelvis, LOS ≥ 7 days, systolic BP < 90 and anaemia were associated with mortality. Severe injury on the NISS and time > 6 h from injury to admission significantly predicted mortality.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12893-019-0530-8Abdominal traumaPatternsOutcomes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shilanaiman Hilary Ntundu
Ayesiga M. Herman
Alfred Kishe
Heri Babu
Ola F. Jahanpour
David Msuya
Samuel G. Chugulu
Kondo Chilonga
spellingShingle Shilanaiman Hilary Ntundu
Ayesiga M. Herman
Alfred Kishe
Heri Babu
Ola F. Jahanpour
David Msuya
Samuel G. Chugulu
Kondo Chilonga
Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
BMC Surgery
Abdominal trauma
Patterns
Outcomes
author_facet Shilanaiman Hilary Ntundu
Ayesiga M. Herman
Alfred Kishe
Heri Babu
Ola F. Jahanpour
David Msuya
Samuel G. Chugulu
Kondo Chilonga
author_sort Shilanaiman Hilary Ntundu
title Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
title_short Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
title_full Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
title_fullStr Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
title_full_unstemmed Patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern Tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
title_sort patterns and outcomes of patients with abdominal trauma on operative management from northern tanzania: a prospective single centre observational study
publisher BMC
series BMC Surgery
issn 1471-2482
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background The abdomen is one of the most commonly injured regions in trauma patients. Abdominal injury surgeries are common in Tanzania and in many parts of the world. This study aimed to determine the relationships among the causes, characteristics, patterns and outcomes of abdominal injury patients undergoing operations at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre. Methods A prospective observational study was performed over a period of 1 year from August 2016 to August 2017. A case was defined as a trauma patient with abdominal injuries admitted to the general surgery department and undergoing an operation. We assessed injury types, patterns, aetiologies and outcomes within 30 days. The outcomes were post-operative complications and mortality. Multivariate logistic regression was used to explore the association between factors associated with morbidity and mortality. Results Out of 136 patients, 115 (84.6%) were male, with a male-to-female ratio of 5.5:1. The most affected patients were in the age range of 21–40 years old, which accounted for 67 patients (49.3%), with a median age (IQR) of 31.5 (21.3–44.8) years. A majority (99 patients; 72.8%) had blunt abdominal injury, with a blunt-to-penetrating ratio of 2.7:1. The most common cause of injury was road traffic accidents (RTAs; 73 patients; 53.7%). Commonly injured organs in blunt and penetrating injuries were, respectively, the spleen (33 patients; 91.7%) and small bowel (12 patients; 46.1%). Most patients (89; 65.4%) had associated extra-abdominal injuries. Post-operative complications were observed in 57 patients (41.9%), and the mortality rate was 18 patients (13.2%). In the univariate analysis, the following were significantly associated with mortality: associated extra-abdominal injury (odds ratio (OR): 4.9; P-value< 0.039); head injury (OR: 4.4; P-value < 0.005); pelvic injury (OR: 3.9; P-value< 0.043); length of hospital stay (LOS) ≥ 7 days (OR: 4.2; P-value < 0.022); severe injury on the New Injury Severity Score (NISS) (OR: 21.7; P-value < 0.003); time > 6 h from injury to admission (OR: 4.4; P-value < 0.025); systolic BP < 90 (OR: 3.5; P-value < 0.015); and anaemia (OR: 4.7; P-value< 0.006). After adjustment, the following significantly predicted mortality: severe injury on the NISS (17 patients; 25.8%; adjusted odds ratio (aOR): 15.5, 95% CI: 1.5–160, P-value < 0.02) and time > 6 h from injury to admission (15 patients; 19.2%; aOR: 4.3, 95% CI: 1.0–18.9, P-value < 0.05). Conclusion Blunt abdominal injury was common and mostly associated with RTAs. Associated extra-abdominal injury, injury to the head or pelvis, LOS ≥ 7 days, systolic BP < 90 and anaemia were associated with mortality. Severe injury on the NISS and time > 6 h from injury to admission significantly predicted mortality.
topic Abdominal trauma
Patterns
Outcomes
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12893-019-0530-8
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