Approach for poly-trauma patient
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Transcript Approach for poly-trauma patient
What is polytrauma
Multiple traumatic injuries to a victum.
Overview of ATLS
P rim a ry S u rvey
(A B C D E 's )
R e su scita tion
S e co nd a ry S u rvey
D a ta / Info rm a tio n /
R e spo n se to T h era py
D e fin itive C a re
Types of assessment
1. Primary Survey and resuscitation
• Identification of Life threatening conditions
• AcBCDE Approach
2. Secondary Survey
•
•
•
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Detailed head to toe examination
Medical history
All lab and radiology investigation ordered
Management Plan
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PURPOSE OF THE INITIAL ASSESSMENT
Identification of LIFE-THREATENING
emergencies
Assess – Change - Reassess
Initiation of LIFE-SAVING
measures (CPR)
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5 second Round
•Pt is conscious or not
•Airway
•Ventilation
•Signs of massive external hemorrhage
•There is any deformity
•Skin color and temp with feeling pulse
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Primary Survey
Airway/
Cervical Spine Control
Breathing
Circulation
Disability (neurological)
Expose
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Assessing Airway
Is the airway:
Clear and safe?
At risk?
Obstructed?
AIRWAY INTERVENTIONS
Jaw thrust Vs Head tilt.
Deliver Oxygen (mask with
reservoir).
Use Rigid suction.
Secure airway.
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5 Chest clues in the neck
Wounds
Distended neck
veins
Tracheal position
Surgical
emphysema
Laryngeal crepitus
CERVICAL SPINE STABILIZATION
Place hands on either side of
the head cervical collar.flv
Maintain neck midline
“manual in line stabilization”
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Breathing and ventilation
Aims
Support if
inadequate
Eliminate any
immediately life
threatening
thoracic condition
…..
Breathing and ventilation
Inspection
Respiratory rate
Effort of breathing
Symmetry
Wounds & marks
Palpation
Percussion
Auscultation
All lung zones
BREATHING INTERVENTIONS
If breathing is absent, start
ventilation using:
Simple Adjuvants (Airways)
Bag valve mask with reservoir
LMA
ETT
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Surgical Airway
Cricothyroidotomy (tracheostomy)
Indication
Unable to intubate(sever maxillo-facial injury)
Contraindication
Transection of the airway
Fatal Chest conditions?
Tension pneumothorax
Open chest trauma
Cardiac tamponade
Flail chest
Massive hemothorax
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Tension Pneumothorax
Signs and Symptoms
Chest pain, respiratory distress, tachycardia,
hypotension, tracheal deviation, absent breath sounds,
neck vein distention.
Immediate decompression
Needle thoracostomy
Chest tube insertion
MANAGEMENT OPEN
PNEUMOTHORAX
Ensure adequate airway
100% oxygen
Seal open wound
Load & Go
IV access en route
Notify Medical
Direction
Courtesy of David Effron,
M.D.
Open pneumothorax
>2/3 of the tracheal diameter
3 sided wound dressing
Chest tube insertion
SEALING THE OPEN WOUND
Asherman chest seal is very effective
SEALING THE OPEN WOUND
You can use impervious material taped on three sides
Cardiac temponade
Penetrating injury
Becks Triad
1) Elevated central venous pressure (distended neck
veins)
2) Muffled heart sounds
3) low blood pressure
FAST scan /ECHO
Pericardiocentesis
Flail Chest
> 2 ribs fractured in 2 or more places usually on the
same or opposite side of the chest.
Paradoxical chest wall movement.
Adequate ventilation/ inadequate ventilation
Chest tube insertion
Massive heamothorax
>1500 cc or 1/3 of the blood volume in the lung cavity
I/V resuscitation
Chest tube insertion
Thoracotomy
> 1500 cc immediately
200 cc/h for 2-4 hours
CIRCULATORY ASSESSMENT
Carotid pulse (absent or present)
Capillary refill
Skin color
Skin temperature
Sites of bleeding
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CIRCULATORY INTERVENTIONS
If central pulse is absent, begin
CPR
Apply direct pressure to open
wounds.
IV access (2 wide bore cannulae14/16G).
Fluids (colloids Vs crystalloids) 20ml/Kg
Peripheral Vs central line?
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Hemorrhagic Shock
Most common cause of shock in trauma
External vs Internal hemorrhag
Blood volume = 7% of BW
Rx : Volume replacement
Shock classification
Classification
Type 1
- 15% blood loss
- p<100
- BP Normal
- PP Normal
- RR 14-20
- Urine output > 30cc/h
- Mental status : Slightly anxious
Classification
Type 2
- 15-30% blood loss
- p>100
- BP Normal
- PP Decreased
- RR 20-30
- Urine output 20-30cc/h
- Mental status : Mildly anxious
Classification
Type 3
- 30-40% blood loss
- p>120
- BP Decreased
- PP Decreased
- RR 30-40
- Urine output > 5-15cc/h
- Mental status : Confused
Classification
Type 4
- >40% blood loss
- p>140
- BP Decreased
- PP Decreased
- RR >35
- Urine output Nil
- Mental status : Confused/ Lerthargic
Fluid Replacement
Class 1-2 : Crystalloid
Class 3-4 : Crystalloid , Blood
Initial Fluid Therapy
- 1 to 2 L for adult
- 20cc/kg for children
“3-for-1 Rule”
- 1cc blood loss = 3 cc crystalloid replacement
Response to Fluid resuscitation
Rapid response
- < 20% blood loss
- Cross match and surgical consult
Transient response
- 20-40% blood loss
- Ongoing blood loss
- Blood transfusion, Surgical Intervention
No response
- Immediate operative intervention
Neurogenic Shock
Isolated intracranial injuries do not cause shock.
Loss of sympathetic tone: Spinal cord injury
Hypotension without tachycardia
Initially treated as Hypovolemia
DDx for non responder
Dysfunction of the CNS
Aims
Rapid neurological
assessment
• Alert; Voice; Pain;
Unresponsive
• Pupils
Mini-neurological
assessment
• GCS score / AVPU
• Pupils
• Lateralising signs
• Blood sugar
Factors affecting level of
consciousness
Oxygenation
Ventilation
Perfusion
Hypoglycemia
Alcohol
Trauma
Head injury severity
GCS
Mild 13-15
Moderate 9-12
Severe <8
Head injury Types
Skull Fractures
Intracranial Bleed
- Epidural Hematoma
- Subdural hematoma
- Intracerebral Bleed
- Sub arrachnoid hemorrhage
- Diffuse brain injury
Epidural hematoma
Subdural Hematoma
Intracerebral Bleed
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Management
Mild Hi(GCS 13-15)
- Neuro-observation
- CT scan if LOC >5 mins
Amnesia
Severe headache
Focal neurological deficit
Moderate (GCS 9-13)
- CT brain
- Admit and observe neurosigns/ FU CT in 12-24 hrs
Severe head injury
Prompt diagnosis & treatment
Do not delay patient’s transfer to obtain CT scan!!!
Inform the Neurosurgery team and Neurology team on
call as required.
Intubate if indicted by the ABG’s and clinical signs.
Transfer patient to OR or ICU ASAP.
Exposure and environment
Aims
Remove clothing to allow examination of entire
patient
Care when removing tight trousers
Prevent hypothermia
Patient dignity
Remove spine board
Don’t Forget The Back
Pause & check
Are all immediately life-
threatening injuries
identified?
Is all monitoring in
place?
Investigations ordered?
Analgesia?
Relatives informed?
Non-essential team
members disbanded?
The well practiced
trauma team should
aim to complete the
primary survey in
less than 10 minutes
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Adjuncts
Once the patient is stabilized the patient is sent to
radiology for the survey:
Cervical spine X-ray (AP and lateral view)
Chest X- ray (Rib cage)
Pelvis X-ray
Abdomen and Pelvis U/S
CT brain is ordered if there is suspicion of head
trauma
X-ray of extremities if fracture is suspected.
Don’t forget medical aspects of
trauma
Judicious fluid management
Adequate and appropriate antibiotic coverage.
Proper pain management.
Continued vitals monitoring.
Secondary Survey
Not to begin until primary survey is complete
History (AMPLE)
- Allergies
- Medications
- Past illnesses/ Pregnanacy
- Last meal
- Events
Head-to-toe examination
GCS
X-rays
Specialized diagnostic tests (CT,MRI,Endoscopy)
Abdominal trauma
Mechanism of injury
- Blunt
- Penetrating
History and Physical examination
- inspection, palpation, percussion and auscultation
- Evaluation of penetrating wound
- Pelvic stability
- Penile, perineal and gluetal examination
- vaginal and rectal examination
Diagnostic Studies
DPL: diagnostic peritoneal lavage
FAST
CT scan Abdomen/Pelvis
Urethrography, Cystography
MRI/MRA
Recommendations
All Trauma patients should be assessed using the
universal AcBCDE approach.
Management of Poly-trauma should include primary
and secondary survey.
Team work is standard in management of trauma
patient.
High index of suspicion should be kept for aortic
trauma in any posttraumatic chest pain.
QUESTIONS?
THANK YOU