Abdominal trauma management requires rapid assessment, aggressive resuscitation, and timely surgical intervention when indicated. Pharmacological management focuses on hemorrhage control, infection prevention, pain management, and support of vital functions while maintaining a high index of suspicion for occult injuries.
🎯 Systematic Approach to Abdominal Trauma
Comprehensive trauma management following ATLS principles:
Primary Survey & Resuscitation
- ABCDE: Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure
- Hemorrhage control: Direct pressure, tourniquets
- IV access: Large-bore (14-16G) peripheral lines
- Fluid therapy: Balanced crystalloids, blood products
- Monitoring: Vital signs, mental status, urine output
- Key Point: Life-threatening injuries first
Hemorrhage Control
- Massive transfusion: 1:1:1 ratio (RBC:FFP:platelets)
- Tranexamic acid: Early administration within 3 hours
- Vasopressors: Temporary bridge to definitive care
- Damage control: Permissive hypotension when appropriate
- Key Point: Stop bleeding before aggressive resuscitation
Surgical Considerations
- Damage control surgery: Life-saving procedures first
- Laparotomy: For peritonitis, evisceration, shock
- Angioembolization: For solid organ bleeding
- Non-operative management: Selected blunt trauma cases
- Key Point: Early surgical consultation essential
💉 Hemorrhage Control & Resuscitation
Pharmacological strategies for massive hemorrhage and shock:
Tranexamic Acid (TXA)
- Dose: 1 g IV over 10 min, then 1 g over 8 hours
- Timing: Within 3 hours of injury for maximum benefit
- Mechanism: Antifibrinolytic, inhibits clot breakdown
- Indications: Significant hemorrhage or shock
- Contraindications: DIC, thrombotic disorders
- Evidence: CRASH-2 trial shows mortality reduction
Blood Products
- Massive transfusion: 1:1:1 ratio (RBC:FFP:platelets)
- Packed RBCs: Restore oxygen-carrying capacity
- Fresh Frozen Plasma: Replace clotting factors
- Platelets: Maintain >50,000/μL (>100,000 if CNS injury)
- Cryoprecipitate: For fibrinogen <100-150 mg/dL
- Monitoring: Coagulation studies, TEG/ROTEM if available
Vasopressors & Inotropes
- Norepinephrine: 2-20 mcg/min - first-line vasopressor
- Vasopressin: 0.01-0.03 units/min - add-on therapy
- Epinephrine: 1-20 mcg/min - for refractory shock
- Dopamine: Limited use, consider for bradycardia
- Goals: MAP 65 mmHg, adequate tissue perfusion
- Caution: Temporary bridge to definitive control
Adjuncts & Procoagulants
- Calcium: Maintain ionized Ca >1.0 mmol/L
- Prothrombin complex: For warfarin reversal
- Vitamin K: 5-10 mg IV/SC for warfarin reversal
- Recombinant Factor VIIa: Last resort for refractory bleeding
- Antifibrinolytics: Consider in traumatic coagulopathy
- Monitoring: Frequent labs, clinical response
🦠 Antimicrobial Prophylaxis
Targeted antibiotic regimens for abdominal trauma:
General Principles
Timing: Administer within 1 hour of injury recognition
Spectrum: Cover Gram-negative rods and anaerobes
Duration: 24 hours typically for penetrating trauma
Re-dosing: Based on procedure length and blood loss
De-escalation: Culture-directed when available
Common Regimens
Penetrating trauma: Cefoxitin or Piperacillin-tazobactam
Blunt trauma with hollow viscus injury: Similar to penetrating
Penicillin allergy: Clindamycin + Aminoglycoside or Fluoroquinolone
Soil contamination: Add Penicillin for Clostridium coverage
Duration: 24 hours unless ongoing contamination
- FAST exam is screening tool - cannot rule out all injuries
- CT scan is gold standard for stable blunt trauma patients
- Diagnostic peritoneal lavage still has role in unstable patients
- Serial abdominal exams essential for non-operative management
- Consider associated injuries (chest, head, spine, pelvis)
- Early surgical consultation improves outcomes
📊 Antibiotic Selection by Injury Pattern
| Injury Type | Common Pathogens | First-line Therapy | Alternative Options | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penetrating Trauma (Gunshot/Stab) | E. coli, Klebsiella, Bacteroides, Enterococcus | Cefoxitin 2g IV or Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV | Ertapenem, Ceftriaxone + Metronidazole | 24 hours if no hollow viscus injury; 5-7 days if contamination |
| Blunt Trauma with Hollow Viscus Injury | Similar to penetrating trauma | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Meropenem, Cefepime + Metronidazole | 24 hours pre-op, extend if gross contamination |
| Colonic Injury | High anaerobic load, Gram-negative rods | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Meropenem, Cefotetan + Aminoglycoside | 24 hours typically, longer if delayed presentation |
| Liver/Spleen Injury (Non-op management) | Minimal unless associated hollow viscus injury | No routine antibiotics if isolated injury | Cover if fever, leukocytosis develops | Not routinely indicated |
| Diaphragmatic Injury | Mixed thoracic/abdominal flora | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Cefoxitin, Ertapenem | 24 hours pre-op, consider thoracic coverage |
| Pancreatic Injury | Gut flora if duct disruption | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Meropenem, Imipenem | 24 hours pre-op, extend if duct injury |
💊 Analgesia & Sedation
Balancing pain control with ongoing assessment needs:
Opioid Analgesics
Fentanyl: 25-100 mcg IV bolus - rapid onset, short duration
Morphine: 2-10 mg IV - longer acting, histamine release
Hydromorphone: 0.2-1 mg IV - potent, less histamine effect
Patient-controlled analgesia: For stable patients
Monitoring: Respiratory rate, sedation scale, pain scores
Non-Opioid Adjuncts
Acetaminophen: 1 g IV every 6 hours - opioid-sparing
Ketorolac: 15-30 mg IV every 6 hours - avoid if bleeding risk
Lidocaine infusion: 1-2 mg/min - neuropathic pain component
Gabapentin: 100-300 mg TID - for neuropathic pain
Regional anesthesia: Epidural, TAP blocks when appropriate
Sedation for Procedures
Ketamine: 0.5-1 mg/kg IV - dissociative, hemodynamically stable
Etomidate: 0.3 mg/kg IV - hemodynamically neutral
Propofol: 0.5-1.5 mg/kg IV - caution in hypotension
Midazolam: 1-2 mg IV - anxiolysis, amnesia
Reversal agents: Flumazenil, Naloxone available
🏥 Specific Injury Management
Targeted approaches for common abdominal trauma patterns:
Solid Organ Injuries (Liver, Spleen, Kidney)
Non-operative management: For hemodynamically stable patients
Angioembolization: For contrast blush on CT, ongoing bleeding
Monitoring: Serial exams, Hgb checks, repeat imaging if needed
Activity restrictions: Typically 6-8 weeks for healing
Surgery: For instability, peritonitis, failed non-op management
Hollow Viscus Injuries
Small bowel: Primary repair or resection with anastomosis
Colon: Primary repair vs diversion based on contamination
Stomach/duodenum: Complex repairs may require specialists
Rectum: Often requires diversion, presacral drainage
Antibiotics: Critical for contamination control
Vascular Injuries
Aortic/IVC: High mortality, require immediate surgery
Mesenteric vessels: Bowel viability assessment critical
Renal vessels: Nephrectomy may be necessary
Pelvic vessels: Angioembolization often effective
Damage control: Temporary shunts, delayed reconstruction
- Hemodynamic instability despite resuscitation
- Peritonitis on physical examination
- Evisceration or impalement
- Free air on imaging studies
- Gunshot wounds to abdomen typically require exploration
- Positive DPL in unstable patient
- Action: Immediate OR preparation, massive transfusion protocol
⚠️ Complications & Special Considerations
Management of trauma complications and special populations:
Common Complications
Abdominal compartment syndrome: Measure bladder pressures
Missed injuries: High index of suspicion, repeat imaging
Intra-abdominal abscess: CT-guided drainage vs reoperation
Enterocutaneous fistula: Nutrition support, possible surgery
Venous thromboembolism: Chemoprophylaxis when safe
Wound complications: Infection, dehiscence, hernias
Special Populations
Pediatric trauma: Different injury patterns, fluid calculations
Geriatric trauma: Comorbidities, medications, frailty
Pregnancy: Consider fetal monitoring, radiation risks
Anticoagulated patients: Rapid reversal agents needed
Coagulopathy: Early recognition and aggressive treatment
Transfer protocols: Timely referral to trauma centers
🎯 Clinical Pearls
Essential considerations for abdominal trauma management:
- Assume multi-system injury until proven otherwise
- Early TXA administration reduces mortality in significant hemorrhage
- Permissive hypotension may be beneficial in penetrating trauma
- Serial abdominal exams are more valuable than single examination
- CT scan with IV contrast is gold standard for stable patients
- Damage control surgery saves lives in critically injured patients
- Early appropriate antibiotics reduce infectious complications
- GCS ≤13 or deteriorating mental status
- SBP <90 mmHg or HR >120/min
- Respiratory rate <10 or >29/min
- Penetrating injury to head, neck, torso, extremities proximal to elbow/knee
- Flail chest, airway compromise, traumatic amputation
- Elderly (>55) with mechanism of concern
- Anticoagulation with any trauma
🧠 Key Takeaways
- ✅ ABCDE first - follow ATLS protocols systematically
- ✅ TXA early - within 3 hours for significant hemorrhage
- ✅ Massive transfusion - 1:1:1 ratio for hemorrhagic shock
- ✅ Antibiotics timely - within 1 hour for penetrating trauma
- ✅ Early surgical consult - improves outcomes significantly
- ✅ Serial assessments - essential for detecting evolution
- ✅ Damage control - life before limb, contamination control