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Journal of Nippon Medical School

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Early Transcatheter Arterial Embolization for the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Grade 4 Blunt Renal Trauma in Two Institutions

Masato Yanagi1,2, Yasutomo Suzuki1,2, Tsutomu Hamasaki2, Kimiyoshi Mizunuma3, Masatoku Arai4, Hiroyuki Yokota4, Satoru Murata5, Yukihiro Kondo2 and Taiji Nishimura6

1Department of Urology (Chief: Y. Suzuki), Nippon Medical School Chiba Hokusoh Hospital, Chiba, Japan
2Department of Urology (Chairman and Professor: Y. Kondo), Nippon Medical School, Tokyo, Japan
3Department of Radiology (Chief: K. Mizunuma), Nasu Red Cross Hospital, Tochigi, Japan
4Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, (Chairman and Professor: H. Yokota), Nippon Medical School, Tokyo, Japan
5Department of Radiology (Chairman and Professor: S. Kumita), Nippon Medical School, Tokyo, Japan
6Department of Urology (Chief: S. Kurita), Tachikawa Sogo Hospital, Tokyo, Japan


Objectives: To evaluate the efficacy of early transcatheter arterial embolization for hemodynamically stable patients with The American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) grade 4 blunt renal trauma.
Materials and Methods: The medical records of consecutive patients with grade 4 blunt renal trauma who were transported to our two critical care centers in Japan and treated with early transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) between 2001 and 2013 were retrospectively reviewed. Treatment failure was defined as the need for further surgical intervention or re-embolization after initial embolization. We divided these cases into two groups, a group who survived and a group who died, investigating the factors that led to death.
Results: Seventeen patients underwent early TAE, with an average time between presentation and embolization for renal trauma of 125 minutes (66-214 minutes). There was no case of treatment failure. Three of the patients died, but none solely because of renal injury. Significant factors associated with patient death were the number of concomitant injured organs (p=0.04), the presence of pelvic fractures (p<0.01), and the presence of visceral injuries (p<0.01). The presence of lumber fractures (p=0.09) also tended to be associated with patient death.
Conclusions: Early TAE is an effective treatment and should be actively performed for hemodynamically stable patients with grade 4 blunt renal injuries without multiple concomitant organ injuries.

J Nippon Med Sch 2018; 85: 204-207

Keywords
blunt renal trauma, multiple trauma, interventional radiology, angioembolization, treatment failure

Correspondence to
Masato Yanagi, MD, Department of Urology, Nippon Medical School Chiba Hokusoh Hospital, 1715 Kamakari, Inzai, Chiba 270-1694, Japan
area-i@nms.ac.jp

Received, October 30, 2017
Accepted, February 21, 2018