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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 89, 723-733, Copyright © 1985 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
AT Zakharia
This report comprises 3,000 casualties of the Lebanon War whom I operated
upon for cardiovascular-thoracic injuries in twelve Lebanese hospitals
between January, 1969, and July, 1982. These patients were studied
retrospectively through 1978 and prospectively thereafter. The logistics,
weapons, wounds, and operative results in this study were unique. The
patients' injuries can be categorized as follows: primarily thoracic, 1,251
(42%); peripheral vascular, 1,008 (34%); cardiac, 285 (9%); and thoracic
mixed, 456 (15%). The male to female ratio was 3.6:1, the mean age 20
years, and the military to civilian ratio 1.7:1. The mean transport
distance was 2 miles in 1,740 patients (58%). In patients with thoracic
wounds, the incidence of cardiac involvement (14%) was higher than in World
War II and Vietnam. The overall survival rate in casualties with cardiac
injuries was 73%--best in pericardial, coronary, and right atrial wounds
and dropping to 46% in left ventricular wounds, wherein pump failure was
also a factor. A 13% (seven deaths) mortality for patients with injuries to
the thoracic great vessels contrasted with the 1.2% (14 deaths) mortality
for the rest of the patients with noncardiac thoracic wounds. Open
thoracotomy in 818 operations (55%) reflected massive wounds and logistics.
Pulmonary resection (310 operations) carried a 1.9% (five deaths) mortality
and tube thoracostomy (683 operations) for lesser injuries, 0.7% (four
deaths.) Thoracoabdominal injuries were 1.5 times more lethal. Fifty
percent (504) of nonthoracic vascular wounds occurred in the
femoral-popliteal area as a result of sniper attacks. Subintimal damage
averaged 8 cm and mandated saphenous vein grafts in 72%. The mortality for
injury to the aorta was 60% (12 deaths), contrasted with 1% (three deaths)
for injury to extremity vessels. Hemorrhage and cardiac rupture were the
most frequent causes of death. Early, proficient, open surgical control
after or concomitant with intensive resuscitation proved successful in this
special military conflict.
ARTICLES
Cardiovascular and thoracic battle injuries in the Lebanon War. Analysis of 3,000 personal cases
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