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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 29

of 'Initial evaluation and management of blunt abdominal trauma in adults'

29
TI
Hematuria as a predictor of abdominal injury after blunt trauma.
AU
Knudson MM, McAninch JW, Gomez R, Lee P, Stubbs HA
SO
Am J Surg. 1992;164(5):482.
 
Among the 1,484 patients included in the Renal Trauma Project with evidence of blunt trauma and hematuria, 160 patients were found to have both hematuria and a significant intra-abdominal injury not related to the genitourinary system. The incidence of abdominal injury generally increased with the degree of hematuria, approaching 24% in patients with gross hematuria. For each category of degree of hematuria, patients with shock had a significantly higher incidence of abdominal injury (p<0.05) than patients without shock. The incidence of abdominal injury in patients with microscopic hematuria and shock was 29%, and it was 65% for patients with both gross hematuria and shock. All patients with gross hematuria after blunt abdominal trauma and all patients with microscopic hematuria and a history of shock should be evaluated for both urologic and extra-renal abdominal injuries.
AD
Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco.
PMID