• Surgically Important Bowel and/ or Mesenteric Injury in Blunt Trauma: Accuracy of Multidetector CT for Evaluation

    Radiology: Volume 249: Number 2—November 2008

    Mostafa Atri, MD, FRCPC John M. Hanson, MBBCh Lenny Grinblat, MD Nicole Brofman, MD Talat Chughtai, MD George Tomlinson, PhD

    Purpose:To determine the accuracy of multidetector computed to­mography (CT) in the detection of surgically important blunt bowel and/or mesenteric injury, to identify and de­scribe the most reliable CT features of bowel and/or mes­enteric injury, and to evaluate the performance of readers with different levels of expertise.

    Methods: Institutional review board approval was obtained for this retrospective case-control study of 96 subjects with lapa-rotomy-confirmed findings: 54 consecutive patients with bowel and/or mesenteric injury (surgically important and unimportant) (32 male patients, 22 female patients; mean age, 40.4 years ± 17.6 [standard deviation]; range, 16-86 years) and 42 matched patients without bowel and/or mesenteric injury (22 male patients, 20 female patients; mean age, 36.8 years ± 20.1; range, 14-84 years) who underwent four-detector CT prior to surgery. A second-year radiology resident, an abdominal imaging fellow, and a staff abdominal radiologist, blinded to patient outcome, independently reviewed CT studies and recorded the probability of bowel and/or mesenteric injury on a five-point scale. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated for each reviewer, and areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUCs) were compared. Thirty-eight (40%) of 96 patients had surgically important bowel and/or mesenteric injury, and 58 (60%) of 96 pa­tients had either no or surgically unimportant bowel and/or mesenteric injury. Sensitivities of the three review­ers in the diagnosis of surgically important bowel and/or mesenteric injury ranged from 87% (33 of 38) to 95% (36 of 38); specificities ranged from 48% (28 of 58) to 84% (49 of 58).

    Results: The only significantly better AUC belonged to the staff radiologist for surgically important mesenteric injury (P = .01). Bowel wall defect, extraluminal contrast mate­rial, thick large bowel, mesenteric vessel beading, abrupt termination of mesenteric vessels, and mesenteric vessel extravasation showed the best positive likelihood ratios for surgically important bowel and/or mesenteric injury; ab­sence of peritoneal fluid showed the best negative likeli­hood ratio.

    Conclusion: Multidetector CT findings accurately reveal surgically im­portant bowel and/or mesenteric injury and have a high negative predictive value.