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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 97, 119-125, Copyright © 1989 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
AK Mandal and SS Oparah
Within a 12-year period ending in March 1984, 1109 patients with
penetrating thoracic injuries were treated at King-Drew Medical Center
located in south central Los Angeles. The average age of the patients was
28.1 years. There were 607 stab wounds and 502 gunshot wounds. Antibiotic
prophylaxis was prescribed only for the 428 patients who had laparotomy,
thoracotomy, and pulmonary contusion with hemoptysis. Of the 1109 patients,
105 had cardiac injuries. All patients with cardiac trauma underwent
thoracotomy, and the mortality rate was 18.1%. Specifically, the mortality
rate of gunshot wound of the heart 24.5% and that of stab wound of the
heart, 11.5%. In contrast, of the 1004 patients without cardiac injuries,
only 115 required thoracotomy and the mortality rate in this group was 0.8%
(8/1004). The mortality rate was 69.6% in patients who had a thoracotomy in
the emergency room but only 2.8% in patients who had a thoracotomy in the
operating room within the first 24 hours after admission. In the 242
patients who had associated abdominal injuries, the mortality rate was 2.1%
(5/242), as compared with 2.5% (22/867) for those who had isolated chest
injuries. In the entire group, the incidence of complications was 5.1%, of
which 1.8% were infectious complications. The presence of associated
abdominal injuries did not influence the outcome. The mortality rate in
noncardiac thoracic injuries is very low compared with that of cardiac
injury. Because of the complexity of the injury, gunshot wound of the heart
has the highest mortality rate.
ARTICLES
Unusually low mortality of penetrating wounds of the chest. Twelve years' experience
Department of Surgery, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, Calif.
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