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Diagnosing cardiac contusion : old wisdom and new insights
K C Sybrandy, M J M Cramer and C Burgersdijk 20 November 2002 CS Intern 이웅재
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car or motorcycle accidents
incidence ; 3-56 %
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Possible complications of cardiac injury
ventricular arrhythmias and cardiac failure (16%) ; It is important to screen all patients with blunt chest trauma to identify risk for complications.
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CAUSES AND CLINICAL FEATURES
steering wheel or rapid deceleration ; thoracic wall compresses the heart between the sternum and spine falls from a great height, sport injuries, blast forces, and indirect compression on the abdomen with upward displacement of abdominal viscera
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Hemodynamic instability
; easily masked in trauma patients due to other severe injuries with blood loss or associated pulmonary, vascular, and neurological injuries. only mild symptoms, such as palpitations or precordial pain
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Chest radiography and thoracic computed tomography
Magnetic resonance imaging
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BIOCHEMICAL CARDIAC MARKERS
First screening tool Histologicaly ; intramyocardial hemorrhage, edema, and necrosis of myocardial muscle cells Creatine kinase (CK) CK-MB troponin I and troponin T (myocardial regulatory contractile proteins) ; measurment after 4-6 hours / persist for 4-6 days
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Electrocardiographic findings
The ECG after blunt chest trauma ; normal or non-specific abnormalities right ventricle > left ventricle
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ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY functionally
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RADIONUCLIDE IMAGING Ventriculography
Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy Positron emission tomography
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IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS AT RISK
troponin I and troponin T ; very helpful in the stratification of patients at risk for complications.
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Screening strategy
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TREATMENT Cardiac monitoring
; Complication - within hours after the trauma.
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CONCLUSION Diagnosing a cardiac contusion remains a significant challenge. cardiospecific troponin I and troponin T assays ; much easier to detect myocardial injury / risk for life threatening complications. combination with an ECG ; sufficient for identifying the vast majority of patients who were at risk
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Moreover, patients with normal troponin I or T concentrations and ECG can be safely sent home.
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