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Traumatic Diaphragmatic Rupture with Intrathoracic Liver Herniation

Stephen H. McKellar, M.D., and L. Ray Matthews, M.D.

N Engl J Med 2009; 360:e7January 29, 2009

Article

A 24-year-old man who had been wearing a seatbelt while driving a car involved in a high-speed motor vehicle crash was taken by ambulance to a local hospital, where his condition was stabilized and from which he was transferred by air to a regional trauma center. Upon arrival at the trauma center, he was immediately taken to the operating room for repair of a partial aortic transection. His other injuries included right rib fractures, right hemopneumothorax and pulmonary contusion, grade 4 liver laceration, grade 2 splenic laceration, and fracture of the right kidney. After resolution of the right hemopneumothorax, an elevated right hemidiaphragm was seen on a postoperative chest radiograph, a finding that suggested traumatic diaphragmatic rupture (Panel A, arrow). A computed tomographic scan confirmed the diaphragmatic rupture and showed that the dome of the liver had herniated into the right hemithorax (Panel B, arrow). The patient underwent laparotomy, at which time the liver was reduced into the abdomen and the diaphragm was repaired. The patient subsequently improved and was discharged home 50 days after the accident.

Stephen H. McKellar, M.D.
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905

L. Ray Matthews, M.D.
Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30310

Citing Articles (1)

Citing Articles

  1. 1

    Valentino Fiscon, Giuseppe Portale, Giovanni Migliorini, Flavio Frigo. (2011) Laparoscopic repair of intrathoracic liver herniation after traumatic rupture of the diaphragm. Surgical Endoscopy 25:10, 3423-3425
    CrossRef