πŸš‘ Imaging of Trauma: Acute ED CT Protocol

🩺 Introduction

In acute trauma, time = life. CT has become the workhorse in emergency departments (ED) for rapid assessment of polytrauma patients. A standardized CT protocol ensures fast diagnosis of life-threatening injuries, guides surgical decision-making, and minimizes missed injuries.


⚑ General Principles

  • Whole-body CT (β€œpan-scan”) is standard in major trauma.
  • Coverage: Head to pelvis in a single session.
  • Goals:
    • Detect intracranial hemorrhage, cervical spine injury.
    • Identify thoracic/abdominal bleeding.
    • Assess pelvis, spine, and extremities if indicated.

πŸ’» Acute ED CT Protocol

1️⃣ Non-contrast CT Head

  • Detects intracranial hemorrhage, skull fractures, brain injury.
  • Often extended to cervical spine (non-contrast) in trauma.

2️⃣ Contrast-Enhanced CT (Venous/Portal Phase)

  • Neck, chest, abdomen, pelvis in a single acquisition.
  • Uses contrast bolus (IV iodinated) with bolus-tracking or fixed delay.
  • Detects:
    • Thoracic injuries β†’ hemothorax, pneumothorax, aortic injury.
    • Abdominal injuries β†’ liver, spleen, kidney lacerations; bowel injury.
    • Retroperitoneal hematoma, pelvic fractures with hemorrhage.

3️⃣ CT Angiography (if indicated)

  • Performed if suspicion of vascular injury (carotid/vertebral arteries, aorta, extremity vessels).
  • Can be added to the trauma protocol, especially for penetrating injuries.

4️⃣ Spine Imaging

  • Cervical spine usually included with head CT.
  • Thoracic & lumbar spine reconstructed from body CT dataset β†’ no extra scan needed.

πŸ“Š Typical Polytrauma CT Protocol (One-stop ED)

RegionContrastPurpose
HeadNon-contrastIntracranial bleed, fractures
Cervical SpineNon-contrastTrauma clearance
Chest–Abdomen–PelvisContrast (portal venous)Thoracoabdominal organ injury, hemoperitoneum
Vascular CTA (optional)Arterial phaseCarotid, vertebral, aorta, extremity vessels
3D ReconstructionsPost-processingSpine, pelvis, fractures

🧠 Teaching Pearls

  • Head β†’ non-contrast is critical (hemorrhage can be obscured by contrast).
  • Chest/Abdomen β†’ contrast-enhanced venous phase is the backbone of trauma imaging.
  • Always assess bone windows for fractures.
  • Spine reconstructions should not be overlooked.

βœ… Conclusion

The acute trauma CT protocol balances speed, coverage, and diagnostic accuracy. A non-contrast head + contrast-enhanced body scan forms the core, with vascular phases added selectively. Proper execution ensures no critical injury is missed in the chaotic ED setting.

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