Vascular Trauma
Hard and soft signs, damage control principles, compartment syndrome, and specific injury management for MRCS examination
Hard and Soft Signs of Vascular Injury
Vascular trauma presents on a spectrum from obvious life-threatening injury (hard signs requiring immediate surgery) to subtle findings suggesting possible injury (soft signs requiring investigation). Understanding this classification is critical for appropriate management and preventing both unnecessary exploration and missed injuries.
The Six Hard Signs of Vascular Injury
Hard signs indicate tissue hypoperfusion or active haemorrhage and mandate immediate operative intervention without further imaging. These findings are specific for vascular injury with sensitivity greater than 95%. The six classical hard signs are pathognomonic for vascular injury and require surgical exploration regardless of other clinical findings. Any single hard sign is sufficient for operative exploration.
Pulsatile Haematoma
Expanding, pulsatile collection indicating active arterial bleeding from vascular wall disruption. Pulsatility confirms arterial source. Immediate operative control required without delay for imaging or other investigations.
Active Haemorrhage
Ongoing bleeding from wound despite direct pressure application, indicating arterial injury with uncontrolled blood loss. Confirms loss of vascular integrity and need for operative haemostasis.
Bruit or Thrill
Audible (bruit) or palpable (thrill) abnormal vascular flow indicating arteriovenous communication or turbulent flow across stenosis or injury site. Indicates vascular disruption with abnormal flow mechanics.
Expanding Haematoma
Progressive swelling despite compression indicates uncontrolled bleeding from vascular source with ongoing extravasation into tissues. Growing haematoma is sign of ongoing hemorrhage requiring intervention.
Pale/Pulseless Limb
Absent distal pulses with profound limb ischaemia manifesting as pallor, mottling, and cool extremity. Requires urgent revascularisation within hours to prevent irreversible limb loss.
Proximity of Injury
Penetrating wound in anatomic zone of injury overlying major vessels warrants exploration in presence of other clinical indicators suggesting vascular compromise.
Soft Signs and Clinical Significance
Soft signs indicate potential vascular injury but lack specificity, present in only 30-50% of patients with actual arterial injury. Patients with soft signs require systematic investigation to exclude significant vascular injury. Soft signs alone do NOT mandate exploration; they mandate investigation through imaging or diagnostic testing. The approach to soft signs depends on patient haemodynamic stability and institutional resources.
| Soft Sign | Clinical Finding | PPV for Injury | Investigation Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proximity | Wound location within millimetres of major vessel | 30-50% | ABI measurement or duplex ultrasonography first-line |
| Abnormal ABI | ABI less than 0.9 or greater than 20% asymmetry between sides | 80-95% | Angiography if abnormal; may repeat at 2-4 hours if normal but high suspicion |
| Stable Haematoma | Non-expanding blood collection contained by pressure/tamponade | Low | Serial observation with duplex; CT if expanding develops |
| Nerve Deficit | Motor or sensory loss in nerve distribution not explained by fracture | Variable | ABI; angiography only if ABI abnormal (nerve injury may be independent) |
| History of Haemorrhage | Bystander report of bleeding at scene or initial blood loss | Moderate | ABI, duplex, CT angiography in stable patients |
| Decreased Perfusion | Cool limb, mottled skin, slow capillary refill not fully explained by shock | Variable | ABI; imaging if abnormal; systemic resuscitation for shock component |
ATLS Primary Survey and Haemorrhage Control
Vascular trauma management follows ATLS framework with emphasis on haemorrhage control. Modern ATLS (2023) prioritises C-ABCDE, placing catastrophic haemorrhage control before airway management. This acknowledgement reflects the reality that uncontrolled external haemorrhage kills faster than airway compromise.
Catastrophic Haemorrhage Control
Direct compression with hand or pressure dressing applied immediately. CAT tourniquet applied 2-3 inches proximal to extremity wound if life-threatening bleeding present. Do NOT delay for other interventions. Tourniquet time documented. Consider REBOA for junctional/truncal haemorrhage if available.
Airway with cervical spine protection
Rapid sequence intubation if GCS less than 8, airway obstruction, or inadequate respiratory effort preventing oxygenation. Anticipate massive transfusion — alert blood bank immediately. Prepare for emergency surgical airway if needed.
Breathing and oxygenation
High-flow O2, bilateral breath sound assessment, identify pneumothorax or haemothorax. Tube thoracostomy for large or tension pneumothorax. Target SpO2 greater than 94%. Ensure bilateral breath sounds.
Circulation and haemorrhage control
Two large-bore IV lines (or central line access). Initiate damage control resuscitation with 1:1:1 ratio blood products. Permissive hypotension target MAP 50-65 mmHg (higher if TBI). Identify all haemorrhage sources: external, thoracic, abdominal, pelvic, extremity.
Disability — neurological exam
GCS score, pupil reactivity, spinal cord level examination. Vascular injuries may mimic neurological injury (e.g., subclavian injury with arm swelling vs brachial plexus injury presenting as arm paralysis).
Exposure and environmental control
Remove all clothing for complete body examination while preventing heat loss. Document all injuries precisely. Continuous vital sign and haemodynamic response monitoring throughout resuscitation and transport.
Diagnostic Assessment Tools
Ankle-Brachial Pressure Index (ABI)
The ABI is the single best non-invasive test for excluding significant arterial injury in stable patients with soft signs. Measured by dividing systolic blood pressure at ankle (dorsalis pedis or posterior tibial artery) by brachial systolic blood pressure. Normal ABI ranges 0.9-1.2. ABI less than 0.9 or greater than 20% asymmetry between injured and uninjured side mandates further imaging or exploration. Sensitivity 98%, specificity 97% for significant arterial injury. Serial ABI at 2-4 hours may be needed if initial ABI normal but clinical concern persists, as intimal injury may progress to thrombosis. Can be falsely reassuring in profoundly hypotensive patients or those with isolated distal vessel injury. Should be performed on both legs for comparison.
Duplex Ultrasonography
Operator-dependent real-time assessment of flow characteristics, stenosis detection, dissection, thrombosis, and pseudoaneurysm formation. B-mode imaging shows intimal flap; colour-flow demonstrates flow disruption. Useful for bedside assessment in unstable patients. Can identify haematomas and assess flow direction. Limitations include operator dependence, inability to assess proximal extent of injury, difficulty accessing subclavian and supraclavicular regions, and poor acoustic windows in obese patients.
CT Angiography (Gold Standard)
Multidetector CT with IV contrast provides excellent mapping of injury extent, identification of proximal control options, and comprehensive surgical planning. Shows intramural haematoma, thrombosis, and dissection planes. Advantages: rapid acquisition, precise anatomical detail, helps identify need for operative intervention, assesses other injuries. Limitations: requires haemodynamic stability, IV contrast contraindicated in renal failure, radiation exposure. Absolutely contraindicated in hypotensive patients or those requiring immediate operative intervention. Delayed imaging in unstable patient results in preventable limb loss.
Mangled Extremity Severity Score (MESS)
MESS predicts amputation likelihood in traumatic extremity injuries. Score of 7 or higher predicts amputation with nearly 100% sensitivity. Components are scored to assess viability across four main categories, each contributing 0-4 points. Total score greater than or equal to 7 indicates amputation likely. However, MESS is a predictor, not absolute rule — physician judgment regarding contamination and patient factors remains critical. Purely anatomic catastrophic injuries (complete amputation at joint level, massive irretrievable tissue loss) should be amputated regardless of MESS score.
| Component | Score 0 | Score 1 | Score 2 | Score 3-4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skeletal/Soft Tissue | Minor injury | Moderate soft tissue loss | Severe crush or complete amputation | Total mangled/amputation level |
| Limb Ischaemia | Pulsating foot, warm, normal sensation | Decreased perfusion | Cool numb extremity | Paralysis and insensate |
| Shock | Systolic BP >90 mmHg | Transient hypotension | Persistent hypotension | N/A |
| Age | <30 years | 30-50 years | >50 years | N/A |
ABI-Based Management Approach
All proximity injuries should undergo ABI measurement. ABI <0.9 indicates arterial injury — proceed to CTA if stable, or direct operative exploration if unstable. Repeat ABI at 2-4 hours if initial normal but clinical suspicion remains high. Serial physical examinations mandatory — compartment syndrome or intimal flap progression can develop over subsequent hours. Any limb with abnormal perfusion on repeat exam warrants immediate intervention regardless of prior imaging.
Additional clinical considerations: Shock states in trauma patients require differentiation between haemorrhagic shock (Class I-IV based on blood loss percentage), cardiogenic shock (myocardial contusion, PE, cardiac tamponade), septic shock (late manifestation from contaminated injury), and neurogenic shock (spinal cord injury). Recognition of shock class guides fluid resuscitation aggressiveness. Class IV shock (>40% blood loss, BP undetectable) requires immediate operative intervention regardless of diagnostic considerations.
Hypothermia develops rapidly in trauma patients — operative environment, IV fluid administration, body exposure all contribute. Core temperature <32°C indicates severe hypothermia requiring extracorporeal rewarming in cases of cardiac arrest ("nobody is dead until they are warm and dead"). Passive external rewarming insufficient — active core rewarming via ECMO or cardiopulmonary bypass necessary. Duration of resuscitation in severe hypothermia may exceed standard ACLS protocols (up to 6-8 hours documented successful outcomes).
Coagulopathy develops rapidly in trauma — termed "trauma-induced coagulopathy" or "acute traumatic coagulopathy". Mechanisms include consumption of clotting factors, activation of fibrinolysis, hypothermia-induced enzyme dysfunction, haemodilution from fluid administration. Viscoelastic testing (ROTEM, TEG) provides real-time assessment guiding targeted transfusion — superior to standard PT/aPTT/platelet count which lag behind clinical deterioration. Some trauma centres implement massive transfusion protocol (MTP) with predetermined blood product packages (e.g., 4 units RBC, 4 units FFP, 1 unit platelets per "round" every 30 minutes) until source control achieved.
Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) represents complication of massive transfusion — within 6 hours post-transfusion, bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, hypoxemia, hypotension develop. Mechanism incompletely understood; immune mechanisms (HLA/HNA antibodies) and non-immune factors implicated. Incidence <5% in trauma but mortality reaches 25%. Management supportive — ventilatory support, diuretics if fluid overloaded. Prevention via leukoreduction of blood products in some institutions.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) reflects severe systemic activation of coagulation cascade resulting in widespread micro-thrombosis and consumption coagulopathy. Triggered by massive trauma, sepsis, amniotic fluid embolism. Laboratory findings: Prolonged PT/aPTT, low platelets, low fibrinogen, elevated d-dimer, elevated LDH, low haptoglobin. Clinical manifestations: Bleeding from multiple sites, organ failure, microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia. Treatment: Aggressive source control, correction of underlying cause, transfusion as needed (controversial whether FFP/platelets/cryo helpful vs harmful — some evidence suggests selective correction only if active bleeding present).
Occupational health considerations: Bloodborne pathogen exposure risk high in trauma surgery. Standard precautions (gloves, eye protection, gowns) essential. Sharps injury prevention paramount — never recap needles, immediate reporting of needlestick injury. Post-exposure prophylaxis for HIV available within hours if source patient status unknown. Hepatitis B vaccination essential for all operating theatre staff. Psychological impact on surgical team following massive transfusion or unsuccessful resuscitation — debriefing and peer support programmes valuable.
Systems-based approaches to trauma care — trauma centre designation (Level I-IV based on resources and commitment), trauma team activation criteria, massive transfusion protocol development, damage control guidelines, and institutional outcome tracking — improve survival. Trauma registries identify outliers requiring investigation and improvement. Preventable deaths reviewed for systems improvements. Survival outcomes continue improving with refined approaches to haemorrhage control, resuscitation strategy, and operative intervention timing.