The Importance of the Mediastinal Triangle in Traumatic Lesions of the Aorta.
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Fecha de publicación
2019Título de revista
Medicina-Lithuania
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
estadísticas | anciano | heridas y traumatismos | mediana edad | mediastino | humanos | aorta | análisis de la varianza | estudios de cohortes | adultoMeSH
Analysis of Variance | Adult | Middle Aged | Humans | Wounds and Injuries | Aorta | Statistics | Mediastinum | Aged | Cohort StudiesResumen
Background: Trauma-induced aortic injuries continue to be an important factor in morbimortality in patients with blunt trauma. Objectives: To determine the characteristics of aortic lesions in patients with closed thoracic trauma and associated thoracic injuries. Methods: Multicenter cohort study conducted during the years 1994 to 2014 in the radiology service in the University Hospital Complex of A Coruna. Patients >15 years with closed thoracic trauma were included. Sociodemographic and clinical variables were studied in order to determine the lesion cause, location, and degree. Results: We analyzed 232 patients with a mean age of 46.9 +/- 18.7 years, consisting of 81.4% males. The most frequent location was at the level of the isthmus (55.2%). The most frequent causes of injury were traffic accidents followed by falls. Patients with aortic injury had more esophageal, airway, and cardiopericardial lesions. More than 85% of the patients had lung parenchyma and/or chest wall injury, which was more prevalent among those who did not have an aortic lesion. Conclusions: Patients with trauma due to traffic accidents or being run over presented three times more risk of aortic injury than from other causes. Those with an aortic lesion also had a higher frequency of cardiopericardial, airway, and esophageal lesions.