Vascular Trauma - Bleeding Battleground
Damage to arteries or veins, often life/limb-threatening.
- Mechanisms:
- Penetrating: Gunshot wounds (GSW), stab wounds.
- Blunt: Fractures, dislocations, crush.
- Iatrogenic: Post-procedural.
- Hard Signs (ā”ļø OR):
- Pulsatile bleeding, expanding hematoma.
- Absent distal pulses, palpable thrill, audible bruit.
- Signs of acute limb ischemia (š 6 P's: Pain, Pallor, Pulselessness, Paresthesia, Paralysis, Poikilothermia).
- Soft Signs (ā”ļø Investigate):
- Hx of arterial bleed, diminished pulses, injury near artery (fracture/dislocation), nerve deficit.
- Diagnosis: ABI <0.9, CT Angiography (CTA), Duplex USG.
- Management: ABCDEs, direct pressure, tourniquet. Definitive: Surgical (repair/bypass), Endovascular.
ā Most common mechanism of major vascular injury is penetrating trauma (e.g., GSW, stab wounds).
Diagnosis - Spot the Leak
- Clinical Evaluation: Assess for hard and soft signs of vascular injury.
Hard Signs (Immediate OR) š "PULSE B H" Soft Signs (Further Investigation) Pulsatile bleeding Small, stable hematoma Unexplained shock/hypotension Associated nerve injury Large/expanding hematoma History of moderate hemorrhage (scene) Signs of ischemia (6 Ps) Proximity to major vessel / Penetrating injury path Audible Bruit Significant bony injury / Dislocation Palpable Thrill Diminished (but palpable) pulses History of hemorrhage (active/pulsatile) - Key Diagnostic Tools:
- Ankle-Brachial Index (ABI): $ABI = P_{ankle} / P_{brachial}$. ABI < 0.9 suggests arterial injury.
- Duplex Ultrasonography (DUS): Non-invasive, real-time, bedside assessment.
- CT Angiography (CTA): Preferred modality for hemodynamically stable patients.
- Conventional Angiography: Gold standard, especially if endovascular intervention is planned.
ā CT Angiography (CTA) is the diagnostic modality of choice for hemodynamically stable patients with suspected extremity vascular trauma.

Management - Stop the Flood
-
Pre-Hospital & ED Resuscitation:
- Direct pressure; tourniquet for severe limb bleed (note time). š Convert <2h if possible.
- ABCDEs, O2, 2 large-bore IVs.
- Fluids: Crystalloids, then 1:1:1 blood products (PRBC:FFP:Platelets).
- Permissive Hypotension: SBP 80-90 mmHg (penetrating), <110 mmHg (blunt) until control (not for TBI).
- Reverse anticoagulants; give antibiotics, tetanus toxoid.
-
Hemorrhage Control & Repair Strategy:

- Key Repair Principles & Adjuncts:
- Obtain proximal/distal control.
- Techniques: Primary suture, end-to-end anastomosis, vein graft (GSV preferred), ligation (damage control), endovascular (stents/embolization).
- Fasciotomy: For compartment syndrome risk (ischemia >4-6h, combined A+V injury, swelling).
ā Popliteal artery injury with knee dislocation: high amputation risk (30-50% if repair >8h delayed), needs urgent surgery.
Complications - Aftermath & Alerts
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HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Hard signs of vascular injury (e.g., pulsatile bleed, expanding hematoma, absent pulse, thrill/bruit) mandate immediate surgical exploration.
- Soft signs (e.g., history of bleed, diminished pulse, proximity, nerve deficit) warrant further investigation, typically CTA or Doppler USG.
- An Ankle-Brachial Index (ABI) < 0.9 strongly indicates significant arterial injury.
- The superficial femoral artery is the most commonly injured peripheral vessel.
- Compartment syndrome is a critical, limb-threatening complication requiring prompt fasciotomy.
- Temporary vascular shunting is vital in damage control surgery for complex injuries.
- Ligation is a life-saving option for non-critical arteries or in exsanguinating patients during damage control resuscitation (DCR).
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