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Preperitoneal Pelvic Packing

Article information

Trauma Image Proced. 2017;2(1):42-43
Publication date (electronic) : 2017 May 31
doi : https://doi.org/10.24184/tip.2017.2.1.42
Department of Surgery, Trauma Center, Dankook University Hospital, Cheonan, Korea
Correspondence to: Dong Hun Kim, Department of Surgery, Trauma Center, Dankook University Hospital, 201 Manghyang-ro, Dongnam-gu, Cheonan 31116, Republic of Korea Tel: 82-41-550-7661, Fax: 82-41-550-0039, E-mail: saint7331@gmail.com
Received 2017 February 12; Revised 2017 February 22; Accepted 2017 March 1.

Abstract

Preperitoneal pelvic packing (PPP), a component of damage control, may be a feasible tool in the management of exsanguinating pelvic fractures. Pelvic packing within the abdominal cavity is an ineffective tamponade to the pelvis. However, when surgically packing the retroperitoneal pelvic space, the hemorrhage is likely to be controlled by increasing tamponade within the retroperitoneal space. We demonstrate the method of PPP in a video clip.

CASE 1

A 24-year-old woman suffered a complex pelvic fracture with hemodynamic instability after blunt trauma. The injury severity score was 24.The patient underwent blood transfusion and preperitoneal pelvic packing (PPP) on both sides of the true pelvis via a lower midline incision in the emergency room (Video 1). The bleeding was controlled, and the gauze was removed 28 hours after PPP.

CASE 2

The right abdomen of a 66-year-old man was run over by a roll of steel pipes. Systolic blood pressure was 90 to 100 mmHg despite initial transfusion of 2 units of packed red blood cells. Physical examination of the abdomen showed a peritoneal irritation sign. Abdominal computed tomography showed an unstable pelvic fracture with a hematoma of the right pelvis. Subsequently, he underwent PPP via a Pfannenstiel incision and primary repair of the small bowel (ileum) via a separate midline incision (Video 2). The gauze was removed 19 hours after PPP.

DISCUSSION

The technique of PPP is described briefly. An approximately 8 cm lower midline incision or a low transverse incision (Pfannenstiel) is used from the umbilicus to the symphysis. The linea alba is incised and the peritoneum is left intact. During blunt dissection through the preperitoneal space from the posterior aspect of the pubic symphysis to the true pelvis on each side of the bladder, the pelvic hematoma is encountered and should be eliminated. The inner aspect of the quadrilateral plate is exposed by palpating the pelvic brim, and so the anterior aspect of the sacroiliac joint is reached. A minimum of three large radiopaque surgical pads or Quickclot Traumapads (Z-Medica Corporation, Wallingford, CT, USA) are placed into the true pelvis below the pelvic brim. Pads are placed sequentially from the anterior aspect of the sacroiliac joint to the retropubic area through the inner aspect of the quadrilateral plate. The fascia is closed with a running PDS suture and the skin with a running nylon suture or staples. In patients requiring laparotomy for intraabdominal trauma, the two incisions should be separated for optimal tamponade of PPP [1,2]

Notes

CONFLICT OF INTEREST

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

Supplementary material

Video 1.

A video recording in the emergency room shows PPP on each side of thebladder via a midline incision with the patient under local anesthesia.

tip-2-1-42-v1.mp4

Video 2.

A video recording in the operating room shows ipsilateral PPP via a low transverse incision followed by primary repair for small bowel perforation via a midline incision.

tip-2-1-42-v2.mp4

References

1. Burlew CC, Moore EE, Smith WR, Johnson JL, Biffl WL, Barnett CC, et al. Preperitoneal pelvic packing/external fixation with secondary angioembolization: optimal care for life-threatening hemorrhage from unstable pelvic fractures. Journal of the American College of Surgeons 2011;212(4):628–35.
2. Tötterman A, Madsen JE, Skaga NO, Røise O. Extraperitoneal pelvic packing: a salvage procedure to control massive traumatic pelvic hemorrhage. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery 2007;62(4):843–52.

Article information Continued