Retroperitoneal hemorrhage: Difference between revisions

Line 25: Line 25:
==Evaluation==
==Evaluation==
[[File:Kidneyhematoma.png|thumb|Left kidney injury (open arrow) with retropeitoneal hematoma (closed arrow).]]
[[File:Kidneyhematoma.png|thumb|Left kidney injury (open arrow) with retropeitoneal hematoma (closed arrow).]]
[[File:Abdotrauma.png|thumb|Right kidney contusion (open arrow) and blood surrounding the kidney (closed arrow).]]
===Workup===
===Workup===
[[File:Kidneyhematoma.png|thumb|A large retropeitoneal hematoma (closed arrow) from left kidney injury (open arrow).]]
[[File:Kidneyhematoma.png|thumb|A large retropeitoneal hematoma (closed arrow) from left kidney injury (open arrow).]]

Revision as of 15:48, 13 June 2019

Background

  • Bleeding into retroperitoneal space
  • Difficult to diagnose given poor sensitivity of physical exam findings (Cullens, Grey-Turners)
  • Can accumulate 4L blood before tamponade

Etiologies

  • Trauma (renal, vascular, colon, pancreas or pelvis)
  • Leaking/ruptured AAA
  • Iatrogenic (colonoscopy, cardiac catheterization, femoral line placement)
  • Spontaneous (coagulopathy)
  • Hemorrhagic pancreatitis

Clinical Features

Differential Diagnosis

Abdominal Trauma

Evaluation

Left kidney injury (open arrow) with retropeitoneal hematoma (closed arrow).
Right kidney contusion (open arrow) and blood surrounding the kidney (closed arrow).

Workup

A large retropeitoneal hematoma (closed arrow) from left kidney injury (open arrow).

Must have high clinical suspicion to make diagnosis

  • CT scan abdomen/pelvis
  • Consider ultrasound for AAA
  • FAST and DPL do not evaluate retroperitoneal space

Classification of traumatic retroperitoneal hemorrhage[3]

Retroperitoneal zones.jpg
  • Zone 1: Central
    • Pancreaticoduodenal injuries, major vascular injury
  • Zone 2: Flank/Perinephric
  • Zone 3: Pelvic
    • Pelvic fracture or ileofemoral vascular injury

Management

Disposition

  • ICU

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Bhasin HK and Dana CL. Spontaneous retroperitoneal hemorrhage in chronically hemodialyzed patients. Nephron. 1978; 22(4-6):322-327.
  2. Ernits M, et al. A retroperitoneal bleed induced by enoxaparin therapy. Ann Surg. 2005; 71(5):430-433.
  3. FELICIANO, D. V. (1990) ‘Management of Traumatic Retroperitoneal Hematoma’, Annals of Surgery, 211(2), pp. 109–123.