Created by Med Student
over 5 years ago
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What is the definition of "penetrating abdominal trauma"?
What is the definition of ''blunt abdominal
trauma"?
What is the management of blunt abdominal trauma patients who are unstable and have intraabdominal fluid identified on focused abdominal sonography in trauma {FAST)?
Which method of evaluation is used in patients with blunt abdominal trauma for whom mental status or concomitant injuries- compromise the abdominal examination and focused abdominal sonography in trauma is unavailable?
What is the management in patients sustaining anterior abdominal gunshot wounds?
What is the management in patients with
abdominal stab wounds with hemodynamic instability, peritonitis, or evisceration?
What is the general principle of emergent
laparotomy in abdominal trauma patients?
Which is the standard technique of opening the abdomen in emergent laparotomy?
Which solid abdominal organ is most commonly injured in blunt abdominal trauma?
Which are the most common causes for spleen injuries?
What is the definition of "delayed" rupture of the spleen?
What is the definition of "Kehr's sign"?
Why liver is a frequently involved organ
penetrating and blunt abdominal trauma?
What is the clinical presentation intra-abdominal haemorrhage in conscious patients?
What is the definition of "haemobilia"?
In which abdominal traumas (blunt or penetrating) stomach is most commonly affected?
What is the clinical presentation of gastric injuries with full thickness perforations of the stomach?
Why physical examination findings in duodenal injuries may be limited?
Why injuries of the duodenum are frequently associated with pancreatic injuries?
Pancreatic injuries are serious problem, in abdominal trauma, resulting in high mortality