Chapter 29 Chest Injuries
A construction foreman was stabbed with a screwdriver in the right anterior chest by an angry employee. Prior to your arrival, he removed the screwdriver. He is alert and oriented and complaining of pain to the injury site. Your primary assessment reveals an open airway, adequate breathing, and strong radial pulse. Based on these findings, which of the following would be done first?
. Evaluate the patient SpO2 level.
The EMT shows that he understands the difference between a pneumothorax and a tension pneumothorax when he makes what statement?
A tension pneumothorax causes cardiac output to decrease; a simple pneumothorax does not affect cardiac output
A patient was stabbed in the right anterior chest and is in obvious respiratory distress. As you perform the secondary assessment, which of the following signs and/or symptoms would concern you that she is suffering from a tension pneumothorax?
Absent breath sounds on the right, distended neck veins, tracheal deviation to the left
During your assessment of a patient with blunt chest trauma, you note that the patient has shallow breathing and paradoxical movement of the left chest wall. You should:Select one: a. request a paramedic to decompress the chest. b. apply high-flow oxygen via nonrebreathing mask. c. make note of it and continue your assessment. d. assist ventilations with a bag-valve mask.
Assist ventilations with a bag-valve mask
An unrestrained female driver hit a utility pole at a moderate rate of speed and struck the steering wheel with her chest. Her airway is open, and she states that it is painful to breathe. Her pulse is moderate in strength and irregular. Breath sounds are equal bilaterally, and there is no jugular venous distention noted. Assessment of her chest reveals bruising and instability to the sternum. When asked, she denies any past medical history. Based on this mechanism and assessment findings, the EMT should be suspicious for what condition?
Cardiac contusion
A 14-year-old male was struck in the chest by a baseball. On your arrival, he is in cardiac arrest. What is the most likely explanation for the sudden cardiac arrest?
Commotio cordis
You have been called to a New Year's party for a male patient who was stabbed in the anterior chest. According to partygoers, the patient went outside with another male and was stabbed. Fifteen minutes later, he was found in the snow and 911 was called. When assessing this patient, what finding would you consider most serious and warrant immediate attention?
Decreased breath sounds to the left lung
Following a stab wound to the left anterior chest, a 25 year old male presents with a decreased level of consciousness and signs of shock. Which of the following additional assessment findings should increase your index of suspicion for a cardiac tamponade?
Engorged jugular veins
Reduced tidal volume due to shifting of expiratory air from the uninjured side to the injured side is a common result of which injury?
Flail segment
A patient has been shot in the chest with a rifle. Assessment reveals a deteriorating level of consciousness and inadequate breathing. Positive pressure ventilation is being administered, and the entrance wound, located midclavicular at the second intercostal space on the left side of the chest, has been covered. Your next action would be to:
Look for an exit wound
Which of the following organs or structures does NOT reside within the mediastinum?Select one: a. Trachea b. Venacavae c. Lungs d. Esophagu
Lungs
A 23-year-old female has been involved in a serious motor vehicle collision. Which assessment finding best indicates that she has a flail segment?
Paradoxical chest wall movement
Your patient was stabbed in the left anterior chest wall at the midclavicular line and fourth rib. His breath sounds are normal, but he is in severe distress and obvious shock. What do you suspect has happened to him?
Pericardial tamponade
What mechanism of injury produces the conditions for traumatic asphyxia?
Person pinned between a truck and wall of a building
Damage to tissues of what thoracic structure(s) will cause impairment of ventilation and a pneumothorax?
Pleural membranes
Assessment findings of a patient ejected from a motorcycle indicate that he has a flail chest wall segment to his right anterior chest. He exhibits labored breathing and an SpO2 at 94%. Breath sounds are clear and equal bilaterally. The segment has been stabilized, and you are prepared to start positive pressure ventilation. Given these assessment findings, what type of injury underlying the flail segment is your primary concern?
Pulmonary contusion
Which term is used for bleeding that occurs in and around the alveoli, reducing oxygen exchange?
Pulmonary contusion
In which thoracic injury is a mechanical collapse of the vena cava involved?
Tension pneumothorax
What occurs when the diaphragm and intercostal muscles contract?
The thoracic cage enlarges, causing a decrease in intrathoracic and intrapulmonary pressures.
A flail chest occurs when:
a segment of the chest wall is detached from the thoracic cage.
While jogging, a 19 year old male experienced an acute onset of breath and pleuritic chest pain. He is conscious and alert with stable vital signs. Your assessment reveals that he has diminished breath sounds over the left side of the chest. You should:
administer oxygen and transport to the hospital
A 37-year-old male was pinned between a flatbed truck and a loading dock. On exam, you find bruising to the chest, distended neck veins, bilaterally diminished breath sounds, and bilateral scleral hemorrhaging. a. suspect a severe hemopneumothorax. b. perform a secondary assessment. c. aggressively manage his airway. d. request a paramedic ambulance.
aggressively manage his airway
An Emergency Medical Responder asks you to explain a pneumothorax. You would explain that a pneumothorax occurs when:
air accumulates around the lung, causing a portion of it to collapse.
An open pneumothorax occurs when:
air enters the pleural space from outside the body.
When you are treating a patient who sustained a rib fracture, you should administer oxygen if the patient is in respiratory distress and:
apply a sling and swathe to the patient.
Closed chest injuries are typically caused by ________?
blunt trauma
Pulmonary contusions are serious injuries because they:
can interfere with oxygen exchange.
You are on the scene of a shooting. Your assessment reveals a 23-year-old male who has been shot twice. The first wound is to the left lower quadrant of the abdomen and is actively bleeding. The second wound is to the left lateral chest and bubbles every time the patient takes a breath. Your immediate action would be:
cover the chest wound with a gloved hand.
The thoracic cavity is separated from the abdominal cavity by the:
diaphram
You respond to a residence for a 40 year old female who was assaulted by her husband, the scene has been secured by law enforcement. Upon your arrival, you find the patient lying supine on the floor in the kitchen. She is semiconscious with severely labored breath sounds. As your partner is supporting her ventilations, you should:
immediately request ALS support
You arrive at the scene of a major motor vehicle crash. The patient, a 50 year old female, was removed form her vehicle prior to your arrival. Bystanders who removed her state that she was not wearing a seatbelt. The patient is unresponsive, tachycardic, and diaphoretic. Your assessment reveals bilaterally clear and equal breath sounds, a midline trachea, and collapsed jugular veins. You should be MOST suspicious that this patient has experienced a:
laceration of the aorta
When a person is lying supine at the end of exhalation, the diaphragm:
may rise as high as the nipple line
If a patient with a chest injury is only able to inhale small amounts of air per breath, he or she:
must increase his or her respiratory rate to maintain adequate minute volume.
During your physical examination of a patient who was hit in the chest with a baseball bat, you notice that a small section of his ribcage sinks when he inhales and moves outward when he exhales. This is known as:
paradoxical movement.
A spinal cord injury at the level of C7 would MOST likely result in:
paralysis of the intercostal muscles
You have sealed the open chest wound of a 40 year old male who was stabbed in the anterior chest. Your assessment reveals that he is experiencing increasing respiratory distress and tachycardia, and is developing cyanosis. You should:
partially remove the dressing.
The _______________ nerves control the diaphragm.Select one: a. costal b. vagus c. phrenic d. intercostal
phrenic
In order to avoid exacerbating a patients injury, it is especially important to use extreme caution when providing positive-pressure ventilation to patients with a:
pneumothorax
A 28 year old male was struck in the chest with a baseball bat during an altercation. He is conscious and alert and complains of severe chest pain. Your assessment reveals a large area of ecchymosis over the sternum and a rapid, irregular pulse. In addition to providing supplemental oxygen, you should:
prepare for immediate transport
Immediately life-threatening chest injuries must be found and managed during the _________?
primary assessment
A patient with blunt chest wall trauma has a flail section to her chest. She is conscious and confused and breathing rapidly and shallowly. After manually stabilizing the flail section of the chest wall, the EMT best treats this condition by:
providing positive pressure ventilation.
A man called EMS 12 hours after injuring his chest. Your assessment reveals a flail segment to the right side of the chest. The patient is experiencing respiratory distress and his oxygen saturations is 78%. His breath sounds are equal bilaterally and his jugular veins are normal. You should suspect:
pulmonary contusion
A patient who presents with profound cyanosis following a chest injury: a. requires prompt ventilation and oxygenation. b. has most likely experienced a ruptured aorta. c. should be placed in Trendelenburg position. d. is most likely experiencing severe blood loss.
requires prompt ventilation and oxygenation.
During the secondary assessment, the EMT notes instability and a flail segment to a patient's lower left lateral chest. The EMT would immediately:
stabilize the segment with his hand.
A patient has been involved in a motorcycle crash and has a flail segment to the right lateral chest. His airway is open and he is breathing poorly at 24 breaths per minute with a decreasing SpO2. The EMT shows that he is appropriately caring for this injury when he:
starts positive pressure ventilation.
The EMT's primary and first concern with any open injury to the chest is:
stopping air entry.
Patients with chest injuries will often present with _______?
tachypnea
Assessment findings on a 33-year-old female who has been shot in the right side of the chest indicate that she is suffering from a pneumothorax. As you care for this patient, your primary concern is monitoring the injury for:
tension pneumothorax.
If a patient has an open chest wound that allowed air to accumulate into the pleural cavity to the point at which the lung is totally collapsed and is starting to shift to the other side, this additional complication is known as:
tension pneumothorax.
The danger of blood collecting inside the pericardial sac after blunt chest wall trauma is that:
the heart cannot contract as effectively.
Children are often "belly breathers" because _________?
their intercostal muscles are not developed
Pleural fluid is contained between the: a. visceral pleura and the lung. b. parietal pleura and the chest wall. c. visceral and parietal pleurae. d. parietal pleura and the heart.
visceral and parietal pleurae.
Which statement made by an EMT demonstrates an understanding of chest trauma?
"Closed chest injuries are caused by blunt trauma and can be just as serious as open chest injuries."
A confused 62-year-old female fell at home, hitting the side of a table with her chest. Assessment reveals instability to the left lateral chest accompanied by minor bruising in the same area. She complains of intense pain every time she breathes. Her airway is patent, breathing is rapid and shallow, and skin warm and nondiaphoretic. Vital signs are pulse 112, respirations 24, and blood pressure 132/64 mmHg with SpO2 at 90%. Breath sounds are shallow but equal to both lungs. Based on those findings, you should treat this patient for what life-threatening condition?
Hypoxia
An alert and oriented young male fell 5 feet from a stage, impacting a metal railing with the right side of his chest, just under his armpit. The primary assessment is negative for life threats, although he does complain of very painful breathing and has remarkable tenderness and crepitus over the 5th rib laterally in this area. Throughout care, what action is essential to perform?
Monitor breath sounds.
You are transporting a young and healthy female patient who was involved in a motor vehicle collision and struck her chest on the steering column. Although the primary assessment reveals no life threats, she does have redness to her sternum, as well as pain and tenderness. Breath sounds are clear and present bilaterally and vital signs are within normal limits. As you transport and reassess her, what sign or symptom would be most concerning?
Onset of an irregular heartbeat
Your patient was shot in the right upper chest. Upon inspecting the wound, you notice that is bubbles each time the patient exhales. Which injury is MOST likely?
Open pneumothorax
A young male patient is self-extricated after hitting a telephone pole and rolling his car several times at a high rate of speed. He is spitting blood and has a large area of tenderness and instability to the left side of his chest. On scene you did not observe any paradoxical motion of the chest wall. The patient remains alert and oriented with stable vital signs, but continually complains of painful breathing. During transport, what is it essential that you do?
Reassess for paradoxical motion of the chest wall.
You suspect a trauma patient to be suffering from a hemothorax to the left lung. What assessment finding would reinforce this suspicion?
Respiratory distress and the signs and symptoms of shock
Elevation of the rib cage during inhalation occurs when: a. intrathoracic pressure decreases b. the diaphragm descends. c. the intercostal muscles contract. d. abdominal contents descend.
intercostal muscles contract
A simple pneumothorax:
is commonly caused by blunt chest trauma
A middle-aged male has been stabbed once in the left anterior chest. His airway is patent, respirations tachypneic, pulse weak and rapid, and skin cool and diaphoretic. Breath sounds are clear and equal bilaterally. The vital signs are: pulse 140, respirations 24, blood pressure 100/78 mmHg, and SpO2 96% on supplemental oxygen. Given this presentation, you would have a high index of suspicion for:
pericardial tamponade.
An unrestrained 32-year-old female motorist hit a utility pole head on at 45 mph. The car sustained extensive damage. She has an open airway, breathing poorly at 32 breaths per minute, and is responsive to painful stimuli. The radial pulse is rapid and weak, and her skin is cool and cyanotic. Breath sounds are decreased on the right side. Emergency Medical Responders are maintaining manual in-line stabilization. Your next action would be to:
start positive pressure ventilation.
On scene at a college football game, a wide receiver is unresponsive after colliding with another player and forcefully taking a helmet to the chest. The athletic trainer reports that the patient is pulseless and apneic. Given the mechanism of injury and patient's presentation, which instruction would be appropriate?
"Let's apply the AED and follow all prompts."