Penetrating Neck Trauma: A Review of Management Strategies and Discussion of the ‘No Zone’ Approach

Author:

Shiroff Adam M.1,Gale Stephen C.1,Martin Niels D.2,Marchalik Daniel1,Petrov Dmitriy1,Ahmed Hesham M.1,Rotondo Michael F.3,Gracias Vicente H.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Division of Acute Care Surgery, UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey; the

2. Department of Surgery, Jefferson Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;

3. Department of Surgery, East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine, Greenville, North Carolina

Abstract

The evaluation and management of hemodynamically stable patients with penetrating neck injury has evolved considerably over the previous four decades. Algorithms developed in the 1970s focused on anatomic neck “zones” to distinguish triage pathways resulting from the operative constraints associated with very high or very low penetrations. During that era, mandatory endoscopy and angiography for Zone I and III penetrations, or mandatory neck exploration for Zone II injuries, became popularized, the so-called “selective approach.” Currently, modern sensitive imaging technology, including computed tomographic angiography (CTA), is widely available. Imaging triage can now accomplish what operative or selective evaluation could not: a safe and noninvasive evaluation of critical neck structures to identify or exclude injury based on trajectory, the key to penetrating injury management. In this review, we discuss the use of CTA in modern screening algorithms introducing a “No Zone” paradigm: an evidence-based method eliminating “neck zone” differentiation during triage and management. We conclude that a comprehensive physical examination, combined with CTA, is adequate for triage to effectively identify or exclude vascular and aerodigestive injury after penetrating neck trauma. Zone-based algorithms lead to an increased reliance on invasive diagnostic modalities (endoscopy and angiography) with their associated risks and to a higher incidence of nontherapeutic neck exploration. Therefore, surgeons evaluating hemodynamically stable patients with penetrating neck injuries should consider departing from antiquated, invasive algorithms in favor of evidence-based screening strategies that use physical examination and CTA.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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1. Penetrating Head and Neck Trauma;Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America;2023-12

2. Penetrating Neck Injury—Early Surgical Airway Management: A Case Report;Journal of Acute Care;2023-10-30

3. Surgical exploration for penetrating neck trauma – an audit of results in 145 patients;South African Journal of Surgery;2023-09

4. Penetrating carotid artery injury by air rifle: a case report;Journal of Medical Case Reports;2023-08-14

5. Current Trends in Head and Neck Trauma;Otolaryngologic Clinics of North America;2023-08

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