EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence
Uncommon; <1% of all traumatic injuries
ETIOLOGY
- Lateral torso impact is 3 times more likely to result in ipsilateral diaphragmatic rupture than frontal impact.
- Suspect diaphragmatic injury:
- Penetrating trauma to thoracoabdominal area
- Injuries that cross plane of the diaphragm
DIAGNOSIS
ALERT
In acute phase, there may be no abdominal visceral herniation:
- This injury may even be missed on initial laparotomy or laparoscopy.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Vary depending on whether phase is acute, latent, or obstructive:
- Acute:
- Tachypnea
- Hypotension
- Absent or diminished breath sounds
- Abdominal distention
- Bowel sounds in chest
- Latent:
- Abdominal discomfort from intermittent herniation of abdominal contents into thorax
- Abdominal pain that is worse postprandially
- Exacerbated by lying supine
- Pain radiating to left shoulder
- Nausea, vomiting, or belching
- Obstructive:
- Severe abdominal pain
- Obstipation
- Nausea, vomiting
- Abdominal distention
- Strangulated abdominal organs may perforate and spill abdominal contents into chest
- Respiratory compromise, sepsis, and death
- Obstructive injuries may present in delayed fashion
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
CXR may reveal herniated loops of bowel or other abdominal viscera in thorax:
- Pathognomonic finding is presence of nasogastric tube above diaphragm.
- Findings are often nonspecific:
- Elevated hemidiaphragm
- Irregular diaphragmatic contour
- Mediastinal shift away from affected side
- Unilateral pleural thickening or pleural effusion
- Areas of atelectasis or consolidation at bases
- Small hemothorax or pneumothorax
- 50% of initial CXRs may be normal.
- Diagnosis may be difficult in latent phase because of intermittent nature of herniation.
- Contrast studies of GI tract may be helpful.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- If diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) is performed:
- Red blood cell count of 1,000 RBC/mm
3
is considered positive for diaphragmatic injury after penetrating trauma.
- May provide false-negative result in up to 40% of patients with isolated diaphragmatic injury
- No lab studies confirm or rule out presence of diaphragmatic injury.
Imaging
- CXR is diagnostic in 90% of cases in which herniation is present, but sensitivity is limited in absence of acute hernia.
- GI contrast studies are the most useful in diagnosing chronic herniation of abdominal contents through diaphragm.
- US may be used, particularly on right side with accompanying hepatic herniation.
- Conventional CT is rarely diagnostic and has poor sensitivity.
- New helical and multidetector CT (MDCT) modalities have much more success in diagnosing subtle diaphragmatic injuries.
- MRI is useful in its ability to visualize the diaphragm as a discrete structure, but is not practical in acute settings.
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Diagnostic pneumoperitoneography:
- Air is injected through DPL catheter.
- Pneumothorax on subsequent CXR is diagnostic of diaphragmatic injury.
- Poorly tolerated by unstable patients and may require chest tube placement.
- Thoracoscopic and laparoscopic exploration may be indicated
- Especially when suspicion is high despite negative imaging results
- Facilitates minimally invasive repair
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Atelectasis
- Hemothorax
- Pneumothorax
- Pulmonary contusion
- Gastric dilation, intra-abdominal fluid
- Traumatic pneumatocele
- Subdiaphragmatic abscess
- Intrathoracic cyst
- Empyema
- Congenital eventration of the diaphragm
TREATMENT
ALERT
- Herniation of abdominal contents into chest wall may mimic hemothorax or tension pneumothorax
- Bowel sounds in chest may help distinguish
- Be suspicious of diaphragmatic injury with lateral compression of chest:
- Be cautious in placement of needle or tube thoracostomies.
- Fecal thorax has been reported with bowel rupture.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Follow advanced trauma life support (ATLS) protocols.
- If respiratory distress is present, immediate placement of a nasogastric tube may decompress herniated abdominal contents.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Palpate within the chest cavity for visceral organs before inserting a chest tube.
- Patients with visceral perforations are septic and need aggressive resuscitation and antibiotic therapy.
- Empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics are indicated in the case of perforated viscera.
- Early surgical intervention is paramount.
- Minimally invasive repair may be possible in selected circumstances
MEDICATION
- Gram-negative aerobes:
- Gentamicin: Adults/peds: 2–5 mg/kg IV initial dose
- Gram-negative anaerobes:
- Clindamycin: 900 mg (peds: 20–40 mg/kg/24h) IV q8h
- Metronidazole: 1 g (peds: 15 mg/kg) IV load, then 500 mg (peds: 7.5 mg/kg) IV q6h
- Both aerobic and anaerobic:
- Ampicillin/sulbactam: 1.5–3 g (peds: 100–400 mg/kg/24h) IV q6h
- Cefotetan: 2 g (peds: 40–80 mg/kg/24h) IV q12h
- Cefoxitin: 2 g (peds: 80–160 mg/kg/24h) IV q12h
- Ticarcillin/clavulanate: 3.1 g (peds: 50 mg/kg/dose) IV q6h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Patients with suspicion for diaphragmatic injury must be admitted to trauma surgery.
- Patients should be admitted to the monitored or ICU setting.
Discharge Criteria
Patients with diaphragmatic injury or any significant suspicion for it must not be discharged from ED.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Patients with diaphragmatic injuries s/p repair must be followed by trauma surgeon to monitor for recurrence.
Pediatric Considerations
- Pediatric anatomic differences predispose to diaphragmatic injury via less severe mechanisms:
- Thinner abdominal wall
- More horizontal orientation of diaphragm
- Greater cartilaginous rib component
- Incidence of right- and left-sided injury is equal.
- More likely to be isolated injury
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Overall mortality is 18–40% depending on mechanism.
- Highly associated with concomitant severe injuries to spleen and liver, hemothorax, pneumothorax, and pelvic fractures.
- Must have high suspicion for diaphragmatic injury with left-sided upper abdominal and lower thoracic penetrating trauma.
- Delayed diagnosis is associated with increased risk for herniation and strangulation of abdominal organs.
- Always obtain chest imaging.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Al-Salem AH. Traumatic diaphragmatic hernia in children.
Pediatr Surg Int
. 2012;28:687–691.
- Blaivas M, Brannam L, Hawkins M, et al. Bedside emergency ultrasonographic diagnosis of diaphragmatic rupture in blunt abdominal trauma.
Am J Emerg Med
. 2004;22(7):601–604.
- Desir A, Ghaye B. CT of blunt diaphragmatic rupture.
Radiographics
. 2012;32:477–498.
- Hanna WC, Ferri LE. Acute traumatic diaphragmatic injury.
Thorac Surg Clin
. 2009;19:485–489.
- Lewis JD, Starnes SL, Pandalai PK, et al. Traumatic diaphragmatic injury: Experience from a level I trauma center.
Surgery
. 2009;146(4):578–583.
CODES
ICD9
- 862.0 Injury to diaphragm, without mention of open wound into cavity
- 862.1 Injury to diaphragm, with open wound into cavity
ICD10
- S27.802A Contusion of diaphragm, initial encounter
- S27.803A Laceration of diaphragm, initial encounter
- S27.809A Unspecified injury of diaphragm, initial encounter
DIARRHEA, ADULT
Isam F. Nasr
BASICS