Initial Stab - Triage & Vitals
- Primary Survey (ABCDEs): Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure.
- Assess Hemodynamic Status: The critical first decision point.
- Unstable: SBP < 90 mmHg, HR > 120 bpm, or altered mental status.
- Stable: Vitals within normal limits.
⭐ Any signs of peritonitis (rigidity, guarding), evisceration, or impalement mandate immediate surgical exploration, even in a hemodynamically stable patient.
The Scan Plan - Imaging & Workup
- Initial Assessment: Unstable vitals, peritonitis, or evisceration? → Immediate Exploratory Laparotomy.
- Stable Patient: Proceed with imaging.
- FAST Exam: Focused Assessment with Sonography for Trauma. Rapidly identifies free fluid (hemoperitoneum).
- CT Scan (IV Contrast): The gold standard in stable patients. Defines organ injury, trajectory, and retroperitoneal status.
⭐ A negative FAST exam does not rule out significant injury, especially to the retroperitoneum or hollow viscera. CT is superior for these cases.
Belly of the Beast - Management Decisions
- Core Principle: Is the patient stable or unstable? This dictates the immediate next step.
- Absolute Indications for Exploratory Laparotomy (Ex-Lap):
- Hemodynamic instability (SBP < 90 mmHg)
- Peritonitis (guarding, rebound tenderness)
- Evisceration of omentum or organs
- Positive FAST exam in an unstable patient
- Gunshot wound (most cases)
⭐ A negative FAST exam does not rule out retroperitoneal bleeding or hollow viscus injury. Consider a triple-contrast CT scan if suspicion remains high in a stable patient.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Hemodynamically unstable patients with penetrating abdominal trauma require immediate exploratory laparotomy.
- Gunshot wounds to the abdomen are presumed to violate the peritoneum and mandate surgical exploration.
- For stab wounds, management depends on stability. Unstable patients, or those with peritonitis or evisceration, need surgery.
- The FAST exam is critical for rapidly identifying intraperitoneal hemorrhage.
- Local wound exploration (LWE) can assess for fascial penetration in stable anterior stab wound patients.
- Always suspect diaphragmatic injury in thoraco-abdominal penetrating trauma.
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