Heart Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Prospective Study of the Definitive Management of the Stable Haemopericardium Following Penetrating Cardiac Injury Utilising Subxyphoid Window and Drainage.
Penetrating wounds to the heart may present to the emergency unit with the presence of blood
in the pericardial sac as determined on ultrasound. If these patients are stable, the study
hypothesis is that they can be managed with a very simple surgical procedure called a
subxyphoid pericardial window (SXW), in which the blood is drained from around the heart via
a small skin incision below the rib cage. In all other centres in the world these cases are
managed by open chest surgery called a sternotomy. The investigator's experience in dealing
with these injuries is that this is unnecessary and requires a large amount of resources for
no benefit to the patient.
In this study, patients are randomized to receive either open chest surgery (sternotomy) or
the much smaller operation of the SXW. The patients are then followed up with respect to
their hospital stay and any complications that they develop. Normally, a patient undergoing
open chest surgery will stay in intensive care unit for a minimum of 2 days and have a total
hospital stay of at least 7 days and be at risk of a number of complications such as
pneumonia. Patients undergoing a SXW usually remain in hospital for a period of 3 days and
do not require intensive care management.
The investigator's hypothesis is that in all these patients the heart injury has sealed and
the patient is no longer in any danger. It is not necessary to perform open chest surgery on
these patients.
Introduction:
This will be the first prospective, randomized clinical study ever performed on penetrating
cardiac injuries in the world literature. A group of patients with penetrating chest
injuries will present haemodynamically stable, with blood in the pericardial sac diagnosed
on ultrasound. The accepted international management of what is termed; "the stable
haemopericardium" has been a median sternotomy. In our experience in Cape Town, when a
median sternotomy is performed in these cases, any cardiac injury if present has already
sealed or there is no cardiac injury. We feel that these patients should be managed with a
much smaller and simpler operation that does not require admission to the intensive care
unit post-operatively and this is merely drainage of the blood from around the pericardial
sac via a subxyphoid window (SXW).
Method A SXW is performed under general anaesthetic and involves a 5 cm incision below the
sternum. The pericardial sac can be opened and the blood drained. This small operation also
allows the heart to be examined for any active bleeding. If there is active bleeding then
obviously, a median sternotomy is required to fix the hole in the heart. If there is no
active bleeding then the patient is randomized to either median sternotomy (the
international norm) or the pericardial sac is merely drained with a soft drain and no
further surgery is performed. The randomization is computer generated. The patients are
documented with respect to intensive care stay and total hospital stay. Any complications
are noted and the patients are then followed up in order to ensure that the patients who
underwent the SXW alone are alive and well. This is essential to ensure the safety of this
much smaller procedure for this condition. Informed consent is signed for each patient and
all patients must be older than 18 years of age.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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