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Optimal timing of delayed excretory phase computed tomography scan for diagnosis of urinary extravasation after high-grade renal trauma.

Authors :
Keihani, Sorena
Keihani, Sorena
Putbrese, Bryn E
Rogers, Douglas M
Patel, Darshan P
Stoddard, Gregory J
Hotaling, James M
Nirula, Raminder
Luo-Owen, Xian
Mukherjee, Kaushik
Morris, Bradley J
Majercik, Sarah
Piotrowski, Joshua
Dodgion, Christopher M
Schwartz, Ian
Elliott, Sean P
DeSoucy, Erik S
Zakaluzny, Scott
Sherwood, Brenton G
Erickson, Bradley A
Baradaran, Nima
Breyer, Benjamin N
Fick, Cameron N
Smith, Brian P
Okafor, Barbara U
Askari, Reza
Miller, Brandi
Santucci, Richard A
Carrick, Matthew M
Kocik, Jurek F
Hewitt, Timothy
Burks, Frank N
Heilbrun, Marta E
Myers, Jeremy B
in conjunction with the Trauma and Urologic Reconstruction Network of Surgeons
Keihani, Sorena
Keihani, Sorena
Putbrese, Bryn E
Rogers, Douglas M
Patel, Darshan P
Stoddard, Gregory J
Hotaling, James M
Nirula, Raminder
Luo-Owen, Xian
Mukherjee, Kaushik
Morris, Bradley J
Majercik, Sarah
Piotrowski, Joshua
Dodgion, Christopher M
Schwartz, Ian
Elliott, Sean P
DeSoucy, Erik S
Zakaluzny, Scott
Sherwood, Brenton G
Erickson, Bradley A
Baradaran, Nima
Breyer, Benjamin N
Fick, Cameron N
Smith, Brian P
Okafor, Barbara U
Askari, Reza
Miller, Brandi
Santucci, Richard A
Carrick, Matthew M
Kocik, Jurek F
Hewitt, Timothy
Burks, Frank N
Heilbrun, Marta E
Myers, Jeremy B
in conjunction with the Trauma and Urologic Reconstruction Network of Surgeons
Source :
The journal of trauma and acute care surgery; vol 86, iss 2, 274-281; 2163-0755
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

BackgroundExcretory phase computed tomography (CT) scan is used for diagnosis of renal collecting system injuries and accurate grading of high-grade renal trauma. However, optimal timing of the excretory phase is not well established. We hypothesized that there is an association between excretory phase timing and diagnosis of urinary extravasation and aimed to identify the optimal excretory phase timing for diagnosis of urinary extravasation.MethodsThe Genito-Urinary Trauma Study collected data on high-grade renal trauma (grades III-V) from 14 Level I trauma centers between 2014 and 2017. The time between portal venous and excretory phases at initial CT scans was recorded. Poisson regression was used to measure the association between excretory phase timing and diagnosis of urinary extravasation. Predictive receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to identify a cutoff point optimizing detection of urinary extravasation.ResultsOverall, 326 patients were included; 245 (75%) had excretory phase CT scans for review either initially (n = 212) or only at their follow-up (n = 33). At initial CT with excretory phase, 46 (22%) of 212 patients were diagnosed with urinary extravasation. Median time between portal venous and excretory phases was 4 minutes (interquartile range, 4-7 minutes). Time of initial excretory phase was significantly greater in those diagnosed with urinary extravasation. Increased time to excretory phase was positively associated with finding urinary extravasation at the initial CT scan after controlling for multiple factors (risk ratio per minute, 1.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.09-1.22; p < 0.001). The optimal delay for detection of urinary extravasation was 9 minutes.ConclusionTiming of the excretory phase is a significant factor in accurate diagnosis of renal collecting system injury. A 9-minute delay between the early and excretory phases optimized detection of urinary extravasation.Level of evidenceDiagnostic tests/criteria study, lev

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
The journal of trauma and acute care surgery; vol 86, iss 2, 274-281; 2163-0755
Notes :
application/pdf, The journal of trauma and acute care surgery vol 86, iss 2, 274-281 2163-0755
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367411553
Document Type :
Electronic Resource