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    Splenic Rupture Medical Slides

    Generate publication-quality splenic rupture lecture slides in 30 seconds. AI-powered content structured for clinical education.

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    Why teach Splenic Rupture?

    The spleen is the most commonly injured solid organ in blunt abdominal trauma, involved in approximately 25% of abdominal injuries. The AAST (American Association for the Surgery of Trauma) Organ Injury Scale grades splenic injury from I-V. Nonoperative management (NOM) is now the standard for hemodynamically stable patients regardless of injury grade, with success rates exceeding 90% for grades I-III. Angioembolization has expanded NOM candidacy to higher-grade injuries, though splenectomy remains necessary for hemodynamic instability refractory to resuscitation.

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    01AAST Spleen Injury Scale: Grades I-V with CT Imaging Correlation
    02Hemodynamic Assessment: Stable vs Unstable and the Decision for OR vs NOM
    03Nonoperative Management: Bed Rest Protocol, Serial Exams, and Follow-Up Imaging
    04Angioembolization: Proximal vs Distal, Indications (Contrast Blush, Pseudoaneurysm), and Outcomes
    05Operative Management: Splenorrhaphy, Partial Splenectomy, and Total Splenectomy Indications
    06Post-Splenectomy Care: OPSI Risk, Vaccination Protocol, and Lifelong Antibiotic Considerations
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    Splenic Rupture Presentation FAQ

    How should nonoperative management criteria be presented in splenic trauma teaching?

    Present the evidence-based NOM approach: Inclusion criteria — hemodynamically stable (or responding to initial resuscitation), no peritonitis, no other indication for laparotomy, ability to monitor (ICU for grades III-V). Protocol: NPO, bed rest, serial abdominal exams every 4-6 hours, serial hemoglobin (every 6 hours × 24 hours, then every 12 hours), CT with contrast blush → angioembolization. NOM success rates by grade: I-II (95-98%), III (90-95%), IV (80-85%), V (60-70%, often require delayed splenectomy). Failure criteria triggering OR: hemodynamic instability despite resuscitation, peritonitis, transfusion >4 units in 24 hours, declining hemoglobin despite transfusion. Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST) guidelines support NOM regardless of grade if hemodynamically stable.

    What angioembolization evidence and technique should be taught?

    Present the expanding role: angioembolization indicated for CT contrast blush (active extravasation), pseudoaneurysm, AV fistula, or high-grade injury (IV-V) being managed nonoperatively. Two techniques: proximal (main splenic artery) — reduces perfusion pressure, preserves some splenic function via collaterals, lower rebleed rate. Distal (selective super-selective) — targets specific bleeding branch, better splenic preservation, but may miss other injured branches. AAST prospective observational study: angioembolization increased NOM success for grades IV-V from 67% to 87%. Complications: splenic infarction (20-30%, usually partial and asymptomatic), abscess (4%), coil migration, contrast nephropathy. Post-embolization management: continue ICU monitoring, repeat CT if clinical concern.

    How should the post-splenectomy vaccination protocol be covered?

    Present the critical importance: overwhelming post-splenectomy infection (OPSI) is a lifelong risk (0.5-1% per year) with >50% mortality once established. Encapsulated organisms: Streptococcus pneumoniae (most common), Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis. Vaccination protocol (ideally 14 days post-splenectomy, or pre-operatively if planned): PCV13 first → PPSV23 at least 8 weeks later (then PPSV23 boost at 5 years), MenACWY + MenB, Hib vaccine. Annual influenza vaccine. Consider daily penicillin prophylaxis (amoxicillin 250-500 mg) for first 1-2 years and for children until age 16. Patient education: medical alert identification, seek immediate medical care for any fever >38.5°C (empiric antibiotics: amoxicillin-clavulanate or fluoroquinolone if penicillin allergic).

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