1. Management of pediatric lower extremity vascular trauma: adult vs pediatric level I trauma centers.
- Author
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Dantes, Goeto, Grady, Zachary J., Weeks, Ahna, Forrester, Nathaniel, Trinidad, Jose B., Stokes, Alexis, Dutreuil, Valerie L., Cheng, Annie, Kim, Phillip, Smith, Randi N., Ramos, Christopher R., Todd, Samual R., Smith, Alexis, and Sciarretta, Jason D.
- Subjects
LEG injuries ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,CHILDREN'S injuries ,TRAUMA centers ,GUNSHOT wounds - Abstract
Background: Pediatric lower extremity vascular injury (PLEVI) is uncommon and the availability of granular data is sparse. This study evaluated the surgical management of PLEVIs between a Level I adult (ATC) vs pediatric (PTC) trauma center. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of PLEVIs (< 18 years) managed surgically between 01/2009–12/2022. Demographics and outcome data were obtained. Primary outcomes included amputation and fasciotomy rates. Secondary outcomes included type of vessel repair, mortality, and hospital length of stay. Results: Seventy-nine patients were identified, 41 at the ATC and 38 at the PTC, totaling 112 vessels injured. ATC patients were older (median years 16.0 vs 12.5) and almost exclusively (97.6% vs 29.0%) gunshot wounds. Vascular surgeons managed 50% of injuries at the ATC vs 73.7% at the PTC (p = 0.10). Amputations were uncommon and not significantly different between centers. Seventeen patients (44.7%) required fasciotomies at the PTC vs 21 (51.2%) at the ATC (p = 0.56). Rates of vessel repair, ligation, grafting, mortality, and hospital length of stay were not significantly different. Conclusions: PLEVI can be managed safely at ATCs and PTCs with acceptable outcomes. However, important nuances in patient triage and management need to be considered. Multi-institutional comprehensive datasets are needed. Level of Evidence: Level III. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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