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Chapter 31- Abdominal and Genitourinary Injuries

Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition
Horizontales
Structures through which materials pass, such as the stomach, small intestines, large intestines, ureters, and urinary bladder.
Black, foul-smelling, tarry stool containing digested blood.
The abdominal cavity.
Solid masses of tissue where much of the chemical work of the body takes place (eg, the liver, spleen, pancreas, and kidneys).
Blood in the urine.
An injury in which there is soft-tissue damage inside the body but the skin remains intact.
Verticales
An injury in which there is a break in the surface of the skin or mucous membrane, exposing deeper tissue to potential contamination.
The displacement of organs outside of the body.
The peritoneal space located posterior cavity of the abdomen.
The region below the rib cage and above the hip.
Involuntary muscle contractions of the abdominal wall to minimize the pain of abdominal movement; a sign of peritonitis.
The membrane lining the abdominal cavity and covering the abdominal organs (visceral peritoneum).