Damage Control Laparotomy: When Seconds Save Physiology

Because sometimes the victory isn’t closing, it’s coming back tomorrow.

Start With the Truth

Definitive surgery is a luxury.
Damage control is survival.

By the time you reach for DCL, the body is already trying to die, acidosis, hypothermia, coagulopathy, hyperkalaemia, hypocalcaemia creeping in like a tide you can’t stop with sutures.

DCL is not an operation.
It’s a strategy, buying physiology enough time to stop falling apart.

The smartest surgeons know when to stop.

Indications: When the Body Tells You “Enough”

If the patient has:

  • pH < 7.2
  • Core temperature < 35°C
  • Base deficit > 6
  • Lactate > 4
  • INR > 1.5
  • On the table hypotension despite transfusion

…you’re now in damage control territory.
Not heroics. Not elegance.
Just bleeding control + contamination control + exit.

Step-by-Step (The Actual Doing It)

Here’s how I run a DCL, swiftly and without self-indulgence:

1. Massive laparotomy → quick exposure

  • Long midline incision, xiphoid to pubis if needed
  • Scoop clot, evacuate chaos
  • Packs to all four quadrants while anaesthesia catches up

Time: <60–90 seconds

2. Identify the killer bleed

Aorta? Liver? Pelvis?
Find it. Control it.

Control options, pick one fast:

  • Packing (liver or retroperitoneum)
  • Stapled resection (shredded bowel)
  • Pringle manoeuvre
  • Pelvic packing
  • Clamp or suture major vessels only if visible without adventure
  • REBOA or aortic clamp if necessary

Rule: If you can’t see it in 60 seconds, pack it and move on.

3. Control contamination

If the bowel is spilling:

  • Staple and exteriorise ends
  • No fancy anastomoses
  • No long dissections
  • No pretty sutures

If stomach or duodenum?

  • Close holes only if fast
  • Patch or drain + come back later

If the biliary tree leaking?

  • Drain, don’t rebuild

Damage control = simple control

4. Strategic drains

Put a drain only where needed for leaked bile or pancreas insult.
Don’t scatter them like confetti.

5. Temporary closure, get out clean

Methods:

  • Bogota bag
  • VAC dressing
  • Opsite silo
  • Any temporary closure that:
    Prevents bowel drying
    Allows re-entry
    Avoids compartment syndrome

Time from incision to exit:
→ Aim for 20–40 minutes
If longer, you’re drifting away from damage control and toward disaster.

What You DO NOT Do

✘ No anastomoses in dying patients
✘ No major reconstructions
✘ No lengthy mobilisation
✘ No “one more thing”
✘ No pride

If you catch yourself saying:

“Just let me fix this one last thing…”
You are the complication.

ICU Resuscitation: The Second Operation

The real repairs happen here:

  • Warm the patient
  • Balanced transfusion or fresh whole blood
  • Calcium, fibrinogen, platelets
  • Reverse coagulopathy
  • Correct acidosis
  • Fix ventilation and perfusion
  • Replete volume, but never ignore IAP
  • Ongoing monitoring for abdominal compartment syndrome

Goal:
Return when:
pH > 7.30
Temp > 36°C
Lactate trending down
Pressor support tapering

The Planned Return: 24–48 Hours Later

You open again to:

  • Remove packs
  • Confirm haemostasis
  • Perform anastomoses
  • Close fascia only if safe

If still unstable → repack → live to fight day three.

Damage control is a series, not a single act.

The Mental Shift

This isn’t “giving up.”
It’s prioritising survival over pride.

You don’t win by finishing the operation.
You win by finishing the patient alive.

And From the Other Side of the Drapes…

They won’t know about the packs or the clamp or the rush to temporary closure.
They’ll never remember that you chose to stop, and that choice saved them.

But someone will.
A mother. A child. A partner.
Someone whose entire world stayed intact because you walked away at the right time, so you could come back tomorrow.

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