Authors
Travis S Henry, Jacobo Kirsch, Jeffrey P Kanne, Jonathan H Chung, Edwin F Donnelly, Mark E Ginsburg, Darel E Heitkamp, Ella A Kazerooni, Loren H Ketai, Barbara L McComb, J Anthony Parker, James G Ravenel, Carlos Santiago Restrepo, Anthony G Saleh, Rakesh D Shah, Robert M Steiner, Robert D Suh, Tan-Lucien H Mohammed
Publication date
2014/11/1
Journal
Journal of thoracic imaging
Volume
29
Issue
6
Pages
364-366
Publisher
LWW
Description
Rib fracture is the most common thoracic injury, present in 10% of all traumatic injuries and almost 40% of patients who sustain severe nonpenetrating trauma. Although rib fractures can produce significant morbidity, the diagnosis of associated complications (such as pneumothorax, hemothorax, pulmonary contusion, atelectasis, flail chest, cardiovascular injury, and injuries to solid and hollow abdominal organs) may have a more significant clinical impact. When isolated, rib fractures have a relatively low morbidity and mortality, and failure to detect isolated rib fractures does not necessarily alter patient management or outcome in uncomplicated cases. A standard posteroanterior chest radiograph should be the initial, and often the only, imaging test required in patients with suspected rib fracture after minor trauma. Detailed radiographs of the ribs rarely add additional information that would change treatment, and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
TS Henry, J Kirsch, JP Kanne, JH Chung, EF Donnelly… - Journal of thoracic imaging, 2014