Acute Medicine & Surgery (Jul 2019)

Delayed diagnosis of traumatic ventricular septal perforation in penetrating chest injury: hematoma formation in the ventricular septum in CT suggests perforation

  • Nobuki Shioya,
  • Nozomu Inoue,
  • Harutatsu Muto,
  • Akiko Tomita,
  • Yuki Tsukamoto,
  • Naonori Kawashima,
  • Koji Hazama,
  • Yasuo Shichinohe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ams2.419
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
pp. 321 – 324

Abstract

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Background Ventricular septal perforation (VSP) can be caused by a penetrating cardiac injury. Diagnosis of VSP tends to be delayed because a shunt might not be detected by color flow Doppler at an early stage following injury. Case presentation A 60‐year‐old man with depression was admitted to the emergency center after a knife injury in the chest. A focused assessment with sonography for trauma revealed cardiac tamponade. Shortly after an open cardiac massage and a pericardiotomy, his spontaneous circulation returned. At a later stage, follow‐up computed tomography, echocardiography, and left ventriculography showed traumatic ventricular septal perforation. Conservative therapy was chosen because the pulmonary blood flow/systemic blood flow ratio was 1.42. Conclusion The initial contrast computed tomography shows a septal hematoma. Its presence could be perceived as a perforation site in the interventricular septum.

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