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2 "blunt injury"
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Cardiology/Thoracic Surgery
The Use of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation in the Surgical Repair of Bronchial Rupture
Ju-Hee Park, Junghyeon Lim, Jaejin Lee, Hee Sung Lee
Korean J Crit Care Med. 2016;31(1):54-57.   Published online February 29, 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4266/kjccm.2016.31.1.54
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AbstractAbstract PDF
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has been used successfully in critically ill patients with traumatic lung injury and offers an additional treatment modality. ECMO is mainly used as a bridge treatment to delayed surgical management; however, only a few case reports have presented the successful application of ECMO as intraoperative support during the surgical repair of traumatic bronchial injury. A 38-year-old man visited our hospital after a blunt chest trauma. His chest imaging showed hemopneumothorax in the left hemithorax and a finding suspicious for left main bronchus rupture. Bronchoscopy was performed and confirmed a tear in the left main bronchus and a congenital tracheal bronchus. We decided to provide venovenous ECMO support during surgery for bronchial repair. We successfully performed main bronchial repair in this traumatic patient with a congenital tracheal bronchus. We suggest that venovenous ECMO offers a good option for the treatment of bronchial rupture when adequate ventilation is not possible.
Blunt Splenic Injury by Gunshot
Young Hoon Sul, Sang Il Lee, Kwang Sik Cheon, Jae Young Moon, Jun Wan Lee, In Sang Song
Korean J Crit Care Med. 2013;28(4):340-343.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4266/kjccm.2013.28.4.340
  • 2,786 View
  • 28 Download
AbstractAbstract PDF
Trauma is frequently not purely penetrating or purely blunt. Such mixed trauma can result from the mechanism of injury. Recently, we encountered a patient who accidentally shot himself with a shotgun. He had a 15 x 8-cm-sized penetrating injury on left flank that did not penetrate into the peritoneal cavity and a blunt splenic injury with hemoperitoneum. Surgical and interventional treatments were performed for each injury. We present this case with a review of the related literature.

ACC : Acute and Critical Care