Management of Trauma
Management of Trauma
Management of Trauma
com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
PRIMARY SURVEY
Airway
- check while leaving the C-spine immobilized
- generally assume: anyone with blunt injury above the clavicle is
probably a C-spine fractre
- Talk to them, ask them where they are.
- Not answering? Hurt them.
Non-purposeful (eg. withdrawing or flexing) motor
responses are a STRONG INDICATION FOR INTUBATION
Crude rule of thumb is a GCS of less than 8
- This is the point where you should look for facial fractures, foreign bodies,
vomit and facial burns
When their ability to maintain an airway is at all in doubt,
INTUBATE
Breathing and Ventilation
- expose the chest Auscultate apices for
- watch the chest wall excursion: is it symmetrical? pneumothorax, bases for
- Auscultate it, high anterior – is air entry equal? hemothorax
Tension pneumothorax, open pneumothorax, flail
chest- these should be identified during the primary
survey
If you find a tension pneumothorax, it becomes your
priority. DECOMPRESS THE TENSION
PNEUMOTHORAX.
Get a valve over the open pneumothorax.
Circulation with haemorrhage control
- HYPOTENSION is HYPOVOLEMIC in trauma until proven otherwise
- 3 elements which yield important information in seconds:
o LEVEL OF CONSCIOUSNESS
o SKIN COLOUR – ashen gray?
o PULSE – thready and fast?
- BLEEDING:
o Control with pressure
o Control with bone traction, reduction of fractures, pelvic braces, etc
o Look in the chest abdomen and pelvis
Two large-bore cannulas
At this point, someone should collect some bloods
Administer WARM fluids
Don’t put blood products in the microwave.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
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Disability
- LEVEL OF CONSCIOUSNESS: you should already have an idea of the GCS
o Eye response and verbal response is already obvious
o MOTOR response is tricky, that’s why you torture them while looking at
their airway.
o Abnormal extension is 2. abnormal flexion is 3, withdrawal is 4, and localization is 5.
- Lateralising signs: if they can move, let them wriggle their toes and fingers
- PUPILS: if they cant move, that’s all you have to go by
EXPOSURE AND ENVIRONMENT
- STRIP THEM.
- At this point, you should log roll them. May be part of secondary survey
- After that, WARM BLANKETS AND WARM FLUIDS
At this stage, you should think about whether you need to transfer this patient
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
SECONDARY SURVEY
Starts when the primary survey is completed and resuscitation efforts are under way
- HISTORY: “AMPLE”
o Allergies
o Medications
o Past history
o Last meal
o Events and environment of the injury
- PHYSICAL EXAMINATION:
o HEAD
Scalp lacerations? Fractures?
Pupil size again, Visual acuity (how many fingers?..)
Conjunctival hemorrhage? Remove the contact lenses.
Ocular muscle entrapment
Do the GCS score again
o FACE
Nothing is urgent except a cribriform plate fracture
Thus, look for midface fractures and CSF rhinorrhoea / otorrhoea
o C-SPINE and NECK
Palpate with inline stabilization; is there pain?
Look for tracheal deviation
Look for laryngeal fracture
Look for subcutaneous emphysema
Auscultate carotid arteries
Look for distended neck veins TAMPONADE or TENSION P.
Wounds penetrating the platysma should not be explored in ED
o CHEST
Look for flail segments; Palpate the whole chest looking for
fractures and subcutaneous emphysema
Auscultate thoroughly, again.
o ABDOMEN
Palpate everywhere
Look for flank hematoma
Look for a pregnant uterus
o PELVIS
Put your finger into any orifice that has blood in it
Examine the perineum and scrotum for hematoma
Examine ONCE for pelvic mobility
Get a pelvic sling brace on if you suspect a fracture
o Musculoskeletal system
Feel up and down the spine (already did this during the log roll)
Look for obvious long bone fractures
o Neurological system
Revise the GCS AGAIN. Look for spinal level. Power, sensation…
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
AIRWAY
Everybody gets high flow oxygen, full stop.
The following things cause you to reach for the tube:
- reduced level of consciousness
- vomit in the oropharynx
- facial fractures, especially midface and mandible
- penetrating neck injury SURGICAL AIRWAY
- the agitated patient for some reason refuses to lie supine- ? is their airway obstructing?
- IS THE LARYNX FRACTURED? There is a clinical triad:
Hoarseness
Subcutaneous emphysema
Palpable fracture
This makes you want to do a tracheostomy, or cricothyroidotomy
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
SURGICAL AIRWAY: when nobody can intubate, or there is no normal anatomy any more.
- NEEDLE CRICOTHYROIDOTOMY buys you time to think
Basically, jab a 12 gauge cannula into the cricothyroid membrane while
aspirating, and wait until you hit air.
Then connect the cannula to 15L oxygen
Connect it with a Y-connector, so you can breathe with your thumb: 1
second on, 4 seconds off.
This is a CRAP MODE OF VENTILATION: there is not enough exhalation
and thus CO2 builds up.
Thus, you can only ventilate like this for 40 minutes maximum.
- SURGICAL CRICOTHYROIDOTOMY
Cut vertically above the cricothyroid membrane
Blunt dissect down to the layer of the membrane
Cut horizontally along the membrane
Insert a small 5.0 or 6.0 tube and inflate the cuff
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
VENTILATION
OBJECTIVE SIGNS OF IMPAIRED VENTILATION:
- Asymmetrical chest wall excursion
- Decreased or absent air entry
- Tachypnea
- Pulse oximetry
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
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Is my patient in shock?
o TACHYCARDIA is usually the first sign
o CUTANEOUS VASOCONSTRICTION is usually the next sign
At this stage, the patient begins to look like a typical “shocked” person,
ashen-gray and tachycardic.
A tachycardic trauma patient with cool peripheries is in shock until proven otherwise
The elderly, who are beta-blocked or have pacemakers, wont get tachycardic. Instead
their pulse pressure will narrow, indicating a reduced cardiac output.
o HYPOTENSION is a late sign, it means compensatory mechanisms have failed;
o Usually at this point 30% of the blood volume is already lost
o Raised ABG lactate is nearly always useless, but gives you an idea of how long
the person has been in shock, and whether your management is improving
perfusion. A severely shocked patient will have a lactate rise even AFTER good
resuscitation, because of “washout” of lactate from the hypoxic tissues.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
NON-HEMORRHAGIC SHOCK
o TENSION PNEUMOTHORAX
Picked up during the primary survey, or on chest Xray
o CARDIOGENIC
BLUNT CARDIAC INJURY with subsequent heart failure, picked up on ECG
TAMPONADE with dilated neck veins and an effusion picked up on FAST or on
the chest X-ray
AIR EMBOLUS
Myocardial infarction associated with hypovolemia (or perhaps the heart attack
which caused the accident)
o NEUROGENIC
NOT the result of an isolated intracranial injury! They don’t cause shock.
Rather, the result of spinal cord transection
This is HYPOTENSION WITHOUT TACHYCARDIA
The peripheries will be WARM.
You usually can predict when this is going to happen during the “D” part of the
primary survey, when you notice your patient cant move.
o SEPTIC SHOCK
Usually the result of waiting for transfer for too long, or penetrating abdominal
injuries.
Losses from fluid shifts: not only hemorrhage, but oedema, also contributes to loss of volume.
-
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
o CLASS 1 HAEMORRHAGE:
15% of blood volume is lost
Mild tachycardia is the only sign
Blood volume is restored within 24 hours
May not need fluid replacement
o CLASS 2 HAEMORRHAGE:
15-30% of blood volume is lost: 750 to 1500ml of blood
Tachycardia
Tachypnoea
Narrowed pulse pressure
Urinary output may not be affected!
o CLASS 3 HAEMORRHAGE:
30-40% of blood volume is lost – around 2000ml
Marked tachycardia
Tachypnoea
Hypotension
Significant changes in mental state
Significant drop in urine output
o CLASS 4 HAEMORRHAGE:
Over 40% of blood volume is lost
Massive tachycardia
Extreme hypotension
Unobtainable diastolic pressure
Negligible urine output
A loss of over 50% of blood volume causes a loss of consciousness
WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT?
If a medically normal 70kg trauma patient arrives to ED with a low systolic blood pressure, you can
work out that they must have lost AT LEAST 30% of their blood volume (30% of 5L = 1.5 litres)
This helps you work out how much you need to replace, with the “3 for 1” rule.
I.e. this guy will need 4.5 litres of crystalloid to resuscitate.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
GASTRIC DECOMPRESSION:
most important in children, who get gastric dilation for some reason.
In adult trauma, the stomach also dilates. You need to prevent aspiration.
URINARY CATHETER:
Assesses for genitourinary trauma (hematuria)
Monitors the perfusion of the kidneys, thus monitoring response to fluids
VASCULAR ACCESS
o 2 x 16 gauge cannulas
o Rate of flow through a tube is proportional to the forth power of the radius, and
inversely proportional to its length
o Best spots are the cubital veins
o All else fails: saphenous cutdown, intraosseous or central venous access
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
So now, you have a patient with an established airway, ventilating
EVALUATION OF RESPONSE satisfactorily, and fluids are running into both arms. Next steps:
all the signs of shock should start to go away; but this is not very sensitive.
- URINE OUTPUT: the best monitor of organ perfusion
For adults, you should get 0.5ml/kg/hr, or around 35-40ml/hr for a 70kg man
For kids, its 1ml/kg/hr
- If you have central access, CVP is probably better than urine output.
- ACID-BASE BALANCE:
o Initially, the trauma patient will be alkalotic from hyperventilating.
o Long-standing or severe shock may produce metabolic acidosis.
o Base deficit and lactate are good markers of this.
o They can also be used to monitor improvement; the base excess should get
less negative, and the lactate should drop.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Open pneumothorax
o This is a large obvious defect in the chest wall.
o If the hole is bigger than two thirds of the tracheal diameter, air will preferentially use the
wound to enter the chest. This is not ideal.
o FLAP DRESSING: close the wound with a sterile dressing, with one free end which
will act s a valve
o CHEST DRAIN is the definitive management. Place it far from the wound
Massive Hemothorax
o Until you get xrays, you may not know about it;
o In a supine patient, xrays may not be obviously suggestive of hemothorax
o You might have creps in the bases, you might not
o HOWEVER, the main indication of hemothorax is a continuing and puzzling
failure to respond to fluid challenges; and then you find absent breath sounds….
YOU NEED A CHEST DRAIN. If over 1500ml comes out, you need a thoracotomy.
If your patient fails to respond or only transiently responds to
fluids, you need a thoracotomy
Medial penetrating injuries alert you to the possibility of this:
the greater vessels may have been injured.
Cardiac Tamponade
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
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Cardiac Tamponade
o Hard to pick up: the history of the injuries will give you best indications.
o PENETRATING INJURIES, eg. stingray barb stabwounds, are the biggest risk factor
o BLUNT INJURIES can cause tamponade because of vessel disruption
Beck’s Triad
- increasing venous pressure – distended neck veins
- decreasing arterial pressure
- muffled heart sounds
Kussmauls Sign
- When breathing spontaneously, venous pressure RISES with inspiration
- This means, venous blood cant really return to the heart; when the
intrathoracic pressure decreases in inspiration, instead of filling the right
ventricle the venous blood pools in the JVP (it has nowhere to go, because
the tamponade prevents filling of the floppy right ventricle)
o To get a proper Kussmauls sign, you need to see the JVP (not likely in a
stiff-collared patient) or a CVP measuring probe (unlikely to be available
during the primary survey)
FAST ultrasound echo:
assesses the “collapsing” right ventricle
may show an actual fluid layer in the pericardium
HAS A 5-10% FALSE NEGATIVE RATE.
YOU NEED TO GIVE FAST FLUIDS. It wont fix anything, but it might maintain the failing
venous return.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Resuscitative thoracotomy
So, your patient has PEA or is in cardiac arrest.
"The surgeon who should attempt to suture a wound of the heart would lose the respect of his surgical colleagues" - Theodore
Bilroth, 1882 – from this online articlehttp://www.trauma.org/archive/thoracic/EDToperative.html
This source also wisely advises, “The first time you see a Gigli saw should not be the first time you perform a thoracotomy.”
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.
This document was created by Alex Yartsev (dr.alex.yartsev@gmail.com); if I have used your data or images and forgot to reference you, please email me.
Summarized from GMP medical school lectures and the ATLS handbook - many parts were treated unfairly brifly, or were entriley omitted- I strongly recommend you read the actual ATLS manual, and attend their excellent course.