Prognostic Factors of Liver Injury in Polytraumatic Patients. Results from 895 Severe Abdominal Trauma Cases

Authors

  • Matthias Heuer Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  • Georg Taeger Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  • Gernot M. Kaiser Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  • Dieter Nast-Kolb Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  • Christian A. Kuehne Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hospital Marburg, Baldingerstrasse, Germany
  • Steffen Ruchholtz Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hospital Marburg, Baldingerstrasse, Germany
  • Rolf Lefering Institute for Research in Operative Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University Witten/Herdecke, Campus Cologne-Merheim, Germany
  • Andreas Paul Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  • Sven Lendemans Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hospital Essen, Germany
  • The Trauma Registry of the DGU German Society for Trauma Surgery (DGU), Committee on Emergency Medicine and Intensive Care, Germany

Keywords:

Liver injury, multiple injuries, immunology, sepsis, multi-organ failure, prognosis

Abstract

Background and Aims. Prognosis of multiple injured patients is mainly limited by severe haemorrhage. Although mechanisms of altered immune response have been intensively investigated, little is known about the relevance of liver trauma as an independent predictive outcome factor in these patients.

Methods. 10,469 patients from the DGU Trauma Registry (1993-2005) were retrospectively analyzed. Primary admitted patients with an injury severity score ≥16, without isolated head injury were included. Patients were analyzed according to the injury pattern as liver injury (Abbreviated Injury Scale - AIS abdomen <3 and AIS liver 2-5; n=321), non-liver abdominal trauma (AIS abdomen 2-5 or AIS liver <3; n=574) and control group without abdominal injuries (AIS abdomen or liver <3; n=9,574).

Results.
 Severe liver injury was associated with excessive demands for volume resuscitation and induced a significantly increased risk for sepsis and multi-organ failure (MOF) compared to both other groups (sepsis 19.9% vs. 11.0%; MOF 32.7% vs. 16.6%). Furthermore, deleterious outcome was more frequently associated with severe liver trauma (mortality 34.9%) compared to severe abdominal trauma (12.0%).

Conclusion. Severe liver trauma is an independent predictor for severe haemorrhage with a substantially increased risk of sepsis, MOF and trauma-related death. While conservative treatment of patients with liver trauma but no haemorrhage is effective, patients with hemodynamic instability seem to be from a subgroup where contemporary treatment modalities are not yet sufficient.

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Published

2009-06-01

How to Cite

1.
Heuer M, Taeger G, Kaiser GM, Nast-Kolb D, Kuehne CA, Ruchholtz S, Lefering R, Paul A, Lendemans S, Registry of the DGU TT. Prognostic Factors of Liver Injury in Polytraumatic Patients. Results from 895 Severe Abdominal Trauma Cases. JGLD [Internet]. 2009 Jun. 1 [cited 2025 Jun. 15];18(2):197-203. Available from: https://www.jgld.ro/jgld/index.php/jgld/article/view/2009.2.11

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Original Article