Trauma: Adrenal Gland Trauma
Adrenal Trauma
General
- Rare Injury (0.44% of Traumas)
- More Common on the Right (75-85%)
- Associated with High Injury Severity Scores (ISS)
- Isolated Injury is Very Rare
- Most Common Concomitant Injuries: Liver #1 & Kidney #2
- May Be Related to Future Development of Adrenal Myelolipomas
Adrenal Insufficiency
- Adrenal Trauma Itself Is Not an Independent Risk Factor for Adrenal Insufficiency
- Adrenal Insufficiency is Associated with High ISS & Increasing Age
Mechanism of Injury
- Blunt Trauma: Crushing, Shearing or Bursting Forces
- Bursting Force – Acute Rise in Venous Pressure from IVC Compression by Abdominal Impact
- Reason for Increased Right-Sided Incidence (Shorter Vein)
- Bursting Force – Acute Rise in Venous Pressure from IVC Compression by Abdominal Impact
- Penetrating Trauma
AAST Adrenal Organ Injury Scale
- *See AAST
- Injury Scale is Under Copyright
Treatment
- Mostly Conservative Management
- Extravasation: Surgery vs Transarterial Embolization (TAE)
- May Consider Conservative Management if Only Extravasation but Normotensive
- Surgical Options: Adrenalectomy vs Repair
Right Adrenal Hematoma, Normal Left Adrenal 1
References
- Dhamija E, Panda A, Das CJ, Gupta AK. Adrenal imaging (Part 2): Medullary and secondary adrenal lesions. Indian J Endocrinol Metab. 2015 Jan-Feb;19(1):16-24. (License: CC BY-NC-SA-3.0)