PST2102 EXAM ESSENTIALS
Newton's 4 Laws
1. a body at rest will remain at rest, and a body in motion will remain in motion unless acted on by an outside force 2. that energy is neither created or destroyed, but changes form 3. the force that an object exerts on another object is equal to the mass of the object multiplied by its acceleration 4. kinetic energy (Ek) is the energy associated with motion, and reflects the connection between weight (mass) and speed (velocity)
treatment goals for shock
1. stop the bleeding 2. oxygen therapy 3. replace fluids
indigenous patients are ? likely to be injured or die of injury. remote areas are ?
2x more likely more likely for trauma injuries
what % of trauma in Australia is blunt
95%
CPP
= MAP - ICP CPP should be 70-80mmHg ICP should be less than 15mmHg
Epidural/extradural haematoma
Caused by low velocity blows to head, violent altercations, deceleration injuries
Severe Haemorrhage
Distention, tenderness, tenseness, pelvic tenderness or bony crepitation
Types of Falls
Don Juan Syndrome Hands Outstretched Headfirst
7. Myocardial contusion
Most common cardiac injury o Blunt anterior chest injury Same as myocardial infarction o Chest pain o Arrhythmia o Cariogenic shock (RARE) o Treat the same as cardiac tamponade
Diffuse Axonal Injury
Mostly from blunt trauma Acceleration or deceleration forces = shearing of neuronal structures
11. Esophageal injury
Penetrating trauma Difficult to assess in prehospital field Can be lethal if left unrecognized
Compression injury
Results from an organ or structure (or part of) being directly squeezed between other organs or structures.
12. Pulmonary contusion
Results from direct injury to the lung which causes haemorrhage and oedema without pulmonary laceration o Bleeding into alveolar space will impede gas exchange o Marked hypoxemia
most common causes of trauma in Australia
Road trauma = most common cause of major trauma (52%), falls (31%), violence (6%)
Outline the principles of standardising trauma management
Scene Assessment 1. Recognition of Multiple Casualty Incident 2. Evaluation of individual patients 3. Conditions that may result in the loss of life and 4. Conditions that may result in the loss of limb, and 5. All other conditions that do not threaten life or limb
Subarachnoid haemorrhage
Symptoms: • Thunderclap headache • Unequal pupils • Seizures
5. Massive haemothorax
Symptoms: • Anxiety and confusion • Neck veins • Flat = hypovolaemia • Distended = mediastinal compression • Breath sounds decreased • Shock Treatment: Load and go -> treat for shock -> fluid admin (titrate to radial pulse 90 - 100 mmHg) consider chest tube to drain blood
shock
a physiologic state characterized by a systemic reduction in tissue perfusion, resulting in decreased oxygen delivery to tissues of the body
difference between absolute and relative hypovolemic shock
absolute: loss of blood, plasma(from burns) or other fluids relative: pooling of blood/internal bleeding
high velocity
missiles that compress and accelerate tissue away from the bullet = leaves cavity
low velocity
missiles that localise injury to small radius with little disruptive effect
MAP
mean arterial pressure pressure needed for adequate tissue perfusion 85-95 diastolic pressure + 1/3 pulse pressure pulse pressure: SBP - DBP
2. Open pneumothorax
"sucking chest wound" Air enters pleural space = ventilation impaired = hypoxia Signs and symptoms are dependent on size of defect
Deadly Dozen of thoracic trauma
1. Airway obstruction 2. Open pneumothorax 3. Flail chest 4. Tension pneumothorax 5. Massive hemothorax 6. Cardiac tamponade 7. Myocardial contusion 8. Traumatic aortic rupture 9. Tracheal or bronchial tree injury 10. Diaphragmatic tears 11. Esophageal injury 12. Pulmonary contusions
9 Laws of Trauma
1. Any anomaly in your trauma patient is due to trauma, no matter how unlike it may seem. 2. Your trauma patient is bleeding to death until you prove otherwise 3. The only place an unstable trauma can go is to a major trauma centre 4. Even awake, alert and stable patients die. It hurts much more when they do. 5. A previously health child who is in arrest or nearly so, is a victim of child abuse until proven otherwise 6. Always complete basic vital sign assessment including exposure yourself 7. Your patient is at their healthiest as you take them into the emergency department 8. Journal of Neurotrauma 9. Question everything!
Abdominal Assessment (8)
1. Deformities 2. Contusions 3. Abrasions 4. Punctures 5. Evisceration 6. Distension 7. Tenderness 8. Tenseness
Motor Vehicle Crashes (first loves rarely reap rewards)
1. Frontal Impact 2. Rear Impact 3. Lateral Impact 4. Rotational Impact 5. Rollover
Phases for Children (WADDELL'S TRIAD)
1. Initial impact occurs on the legs 2. Second impact when bonnet impacts into the child's thorax 3. The third impact occurs when the child is thrown downward
triad of death
1. No oxygen = ATP can only be produced by anaerobic glycolysis = produce lactic acid = acidosis in body 2. Less ATP being produced = less heat made as by product = hypothermia 3. Tissue damage from hypoxic cells = triggers inflammatory response = issues with clotting = coagulopathy (lack of blood clotting)
6. Cardiac tamponade WHAT TRIAD BITCH
Beck's Triad - Distant/muffled heart sounds - Jugular vein distention - Low blood pressure (hypotension) Treatment: rapid transport -> treat for shock -> fluid administration (titrate to peripheral pulse 90 - 100mmHg) -> monitor and treat arrhythmias
types of shock (chod)
Cardiogenic Hypovolemic Obstructive Distributive
Subdural haematoma
Classified as acute, subacute and chronic • Depends on time lapse between injury and development of symptoms With 24 hours = acute 2-10 days = subacute 2 weeks = chronic Iconic symptoms: decorticate or decerebrate posturing, bulging fontanelles
Intracerebral haematoma
Collection of more than 5mls of blood in brain once symptoms appear = patient detiorates rapidly
Trauma to the eye and orbit (5 types)
Eyelid lacerations Corneal abrasions o Results in photophobia Subconjunctival haemorrhage o Bright red sclera o Usually resolves after several weeks o Not life threatening Hyphema o Blood in the iris and cornea o Can only be diagnosed if upright Open globe o Globe of the eye has ruptured o Threat of infection
neurogenic shock
Form of distributive shock Less common than hypovolaemic shock • Injury to the cervical or thoracic spinal cord = loss of sympathetic control = widespread vasodilation = inappropriate matching of the size of the vascular space to the blood volume EFFECTS: • Constriction of the blood vessels will be lost • Vasodilation will occur • Relative hypotension • Bradycardia • Sympathetic tone loss = environmental heat loss
importance of high level cervical injuries
High level cervical injuries may lead to airway obstruction due to local haematoma and swelling Lesions at C5 or higher = diaphragmatic paresis or paralysis because the phrenic nerve arises from C3 to C5.
why do we never hyperventilate patients
Hyperventilation decreases ICP = decreases PaCO2 = chemoreceptors are not stimulated = body's natural respiratory regulation system is impaired
dislocation management
Management Check PMS distal to major joint dislocations No neurovascular compromise • Splint in position found Neurovascular compromise • Apply only gentle traction in effort to straighten • Often best: pad and splint in most comfortable position and rapid safe transport For both: moist combined and splint Methoxy takes 8-10 breathes before it works Obesity = more prone to severe fractures
amputation management
Management 1. Clean the amputated part by gentle rinsing with crystalloid solution; 2. Wrap the part in sterile gauze moistened with crystalloid solution and place it in a plastic bag or container (sealed) 3. Label the bag/container, place it in an outer container filled with crushed ice 4. Do not freeze the part by placing it directly on the ice or by adding another coolant such as dry ice 5. Transport part WITH patient to the appropriate facility
spinal shock
Not a true form of shock Temporary loss of all neurological activity below the level of the cord injury, includes reflexes. Refers to the flaccid areflexia after spinal cord injury, and may last hours to weeks
Cerebral contusion
Occurs when a force causes the brain to be displaced against irregular surfaces of the skull = tiny blood vessels in pia matter rupture Coup: brain damaged at site of impact Contra coup: brain damaged at opposite of site/contralateral side
Splenic Injury
Referred left posterior shoulder pain
Liver Injury
Referred right posterior shoulder pain
Shear injury
The result of one organ or structure (or part thereof) changing speed faster than another organ or structure
Evisceration
This includes: • Disembowelment • Removal of other abdominal organs Treatment Do not push viscera back into abdomen Gently cover with moistened gauze / dressing Apply non-adherent material to prevent drying If intestines are allowed to dry, they may become irreversibly damaged • Flexing the legs slightly at the knees can assist in taking pressure off abdominal musculature
Le Fort III
Transverse fracture "craniofacial dysjunction" TBI, injury to tear ducts, CSF from nose
3. Flail chest
Treatment: Assist ventilation -> consider ICP support for intubation -> load and go -> stabilise flail segment
4. Tension pneumothorax
Treatment: Decompress affected side if: • Respiratory distress • Cyanosis • Loss of radial pulse • Decreasing level of consciousness • Load and go Altered conscious state • Incorrect tube placement mimics tension pneumothorax
spinal cord injury? primary vs secondary
an insult to the spinal cord which results in an alteration either temporarily or permanently to the normal motor, sensory or autonomic function of the cord. Primary (occur at the time of impact) Secondary (occur after primary injury due to pathological cascade)
types of thoracic injuries
axial loading hyperflexion extension rotation distraction
quinary blast injuries
bacteria, chemical and radioactive hyper inflammatory states
all major trauma patients require a ? C5 injuries require ? vagus stimulation from the gag reflex can?
canula intubation for mechanical ventilation worsen neurogenic shock
what happens in shock
cells are unable to generate enough ATP for their metabolic requirements = cell death = when cells die, their membranes allow the cell contents to leak into the extracellular space = generate more toxic environment for the adjacent cells = increased cell death
tension pneumothorax skills (2)
chest needle decompression OR finger thoracostomy
muzzle blast
cloudof hot gas and powder from gun
cavitation
creation of temporary cavity as tissues are stretched or compressed
quaternary blast injuries
crush injuries, burns, psychological trauma, hypothermia
velocity
determined by how much energy is behind a weapon e.g low (stab wound), high (gunshot)
signs and symptoms of thoracic trauma
distended neck veins tracheal deviation abnormal breath sounds, shortness of breath hemopytsis (coughing blood) subcutaneous emphysema chest wall contusion, tenderness, cavitation
Le Fort I
downward force blood clots occulde airway also swelling of soft palate
tertiary blast injuries
ejection from blast waves. similar to fall injuries.
how much blood can be lost in a pelvic fracture or a femur fracture
femur: 1000ml - 2000ml each pelvic: 1000ml - may lacerate bladder or large pelvic blood vessels
tranexamic acid
for non compressivle injuries (SBP <90 AND HR >120) 1000mg in 100mls 0.9% salive over 10 mins within 3 hours of injury
Diffused TBI:
injury is spread across the brain e.g concussion, diffse axonal injury
obstructive shock
heart pumps well but the outflow is obstructed cardiac output = increase preload = decrease afterload = decrease
cardiac output
heart rate x stroke volume
every fracture patient needs ?
ice!
cushings triad
increase SBP, decrease PR, decrease RR (opposite to shock)
how does the body naturally counter hypo perfusion
increase in CO2 and acid = relaxes precapillary sphincters = sluggish blood flow acidic waste = triggers hemoglobin to dissociate from O2 at a faster rate = blood carries 4x more O2 than usual
C3, C4, C5
keep the diaphragm alive :) ooo dermatones
hypovolemic shock
loss of blood or fluid, heart pumps well but not enough blood to pump cardiac output = decrease preload = decrease afterload = increase
secondary tbi
occurring as a result of the changes in the brain after injury (treatable and reversible)
focal TBIs
one local part of the brain is injured
kinematics
process of evaluating an event and determining the injuries that could have occured given the forces and motion involved
secondary blast injuries
projection of debris = laceration, burns
Le Fort II
pyramidal fracture blood loss occludes airway
Haemostatic agents
recommended in the pre-hospital setting in anatomic areas where tourniquets cannot be applied and where sustained direct pressure alone is ineffective or impractical
Tourniquets
recommended that in the pre-hospital setting tourniquets remain place once properly applied until definitive care has been reached 5cm above wound/uninjured tissue life or limb scenarios only note time placed no pulse = good placement
afterload
resistance left ventricle must overcome to circulate blood
primary tbi
result of the initial mechanical force
distributive shock
resulting from loss of vasomotor tone in vessels = drop in blood pressure. heart pumps well but ther eis peripheral vasodilation. cardiac output = increase preload = decrease afterload = decrease e.g sepsis shock (infection), neurogenic shock (injury in T5 or above = vasomotor depression = spinal anesthesia), anaphylactic shock (hypersensitivity = overproduction of vasodilators)
cardiogenic shock
resulting from pump failure cardiac output = decrease preload = increase afterload = decrease
10. Diaphragmatic tears
severe blow to abdomen = herniation of abdominal organs more common on left side, abdomen appears scaphoid
primary blast injuries
shock wave damages ear drum, pulmonary haemorrhage, contusion, rupture
homeostasis is? and what variables indicate the body's state of homeostasis
the maintenance of the body's internal environment despite changes in the external environment. PaCO2 RR work of breathing adventisious sounds urine, skin (plasma osmolarity) core temperature hyperkaleamia MAP
preload
volume of blood in ventricles after diastole OR how much blood is returned to the heart OR the degree to which the heart is stretched when it is filled.
Splinting Rules
• Adequately visualize • Distal PMS before and after splinting • Treat neurovascular compromise • Cover open wounds with sterile dressing • Immobilize one joint above and below • Apply on side away from open wound • Pad splint well • Do not attempt to push bone ends under skin
primary spinal cord injuries
• Cord concussion (Temp disruption of function) • Cord contusion (bleeding, bruising to tissues of SC) • Cord compression (swelling and pressure) • Laceration (permanent loss of function) • Cord transection complete/incomplete
concussion
• Diagnosed when a patient shows any transient alteration in neurologic function. • Post-traumatic amnesia is the hallmark sign of concussion. Symptoms • Vacant stare • Disorientation • Slurred or incoherent speech • Memory deficits
blunt abdominal trauma
• Direct compression of the abdomen: o Fracture of solid organs (spleen/liver) o Blowout of hollow organs (intestines) • Deceleration forces: o Tearing of organs and blood vessels Liver and spleen injury is most common
Compartment Syndrome
• Forearm and lower leg most common • Swelling compresses nerves and vessels
Specific Musculoskeletal Injuries
• Fractures • Dislocations • Amputations • Open wounds • Neurovascular injuries • Impaled objects • Compartment syndrome
Specific Eye Injury Management
• Place patient on spine board and elevate head of spine board 40 degrees to decrease intraocular pressure o Elevate head to decrease intraocular pressure • Instruct patient to avoid any activity that might increase intraocular pressure • Analgesics and antiemetics may be indicated for pain relief and nausea
Crush Syndrome (myoglobin, urine, hyperkalaemia)
• Renal failure & death after severe muscle trauma • Arises from crushing type injury to large muscle masses - commonly thigh or calf • Gives coca cola coloured urine from renal failure • Occurs when destruction of muscle releases myoglobin and potassium • Myoglobin serves as an intracellular storage site for oxygen in the muscle cells • When released in excess can cause damage to kidneys = renal failure and death • Myoglobin is what gives muscles their red color Management • Early and aggressive fluid resuscitation with normal saline at a rate of up to 1500ml / hour • Dilutes excess of potassium and myoglobin in blood • Prophylaxis for hyperkalaemia
secondary spinal cord injuries
• Swelling • Ischemia • Movement of bone fragments
direct pressure
• helps to slow down or stop bleeding. • Also reduces the area (size) of the opening of the damaged vessel = reduced blood flow