J Korean Surg Soc.  1998 Sep;55(3):368-374.

A Clinical Analysis of Traumatic Diaphragmatic Rupture

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, Dae Rim Saint Mary's Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Chest Surgery, Dae Rim Saint Mary's Hospital, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

A clinical analysis was made of 18 cases of traumatic diaphragmatic rupture which had been treated during the 8 years from January 1989 to December 1997 at the Department of Surgery & Chest Surgery, Dae Rim Saint Mary's Hospital. The results are as follows: 1) The most common ages were 3rd and 4th decades (61.1%).There were 14 males and 4 females (M : F = 3.5 : 1) 2) The traumatic diaphragmatic ruptures were due to blunt trauma in 13 (72.2%) patients (left 10, right 3) and penetrating trauma in 5 (27.8%) patients (left 5). 3) The common symptoms were dyspnea (77.8%), abdominal pain (66.7%), and chest pain (55.6%). 4) 12 of the 18 patients were diagnosed before operation. Six patients were diagnosed during operation. 5) 15 of the 18 patients were operated on within 24 hours (83.3%). 6) The most common associated intraabdominal injured organ was spleen (44.4%). The most common herniated organ was colon (27.8%). 7) Most of the injuries ranged in size from 6 to 10 cm in the blunt trauma patients (53.8%) and less than 5 cm in penetrating trauma patients (100%). 8) The operations were done using a laparotomy alone in 11 patients, a thoracotomy in 5 patients, and a thoracoabdominal incision in 2 patients. 9) Postoperative complications were developed in 8 patients (44.4%). 10) The perioperative mortality was 11.1%, and the causes of deaths were hypovolemic shock and septic shock. In conculusion, traumatic diaphragmatic rupture without severe associated organ injury could reveal a good outcome, if early diagnosis and proper treatment was performed.

Keyword

Diaphragmatic rupture; Traumatic

MeSH Terms

Abdominal Pain
Cause of Death
Chest Pain
Colon
Dyspnea
Early Diagnosis
Female
Humans
Laparotomy
Male
Mortality
Postoperative Complications
Rupture*
Saints
Shock
Shock, Septic
Spleen
Thoracotomy
Thorax
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