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Trauma, Multiple, Emergency Medicine


Basics


Description


  • Standardized approach for rapid assessment of the trauma patient
  • Although presented as a sequential method for gathering information, many of these steps can be performed simultaneously.
  • In general, injuries must be prioritized in order of severity to increase survival. Life-threatening injuries, particularly when abnormal vital signs are present, must be immediately addressed and treated before going on to the next level of care.
  • With any change in the patients status, the primary survey should be repeated.

Etiology


Variety of causes such as: ‚  
  • Motor vehicle/motorcycle crashes
  • Falls from heights
  • Assault
  • Airplane crashes
  • Train derailments
  • Results of mass-casualty weapons
  • Terrorism

Diagnosis


  • Triage to a major trauma center is determined by local protocols.
  • Injured patients with a need for surgical, neurosurgical, or orthopedic intervention should be transported to a major trauma center.
  • Recent recommendations from the American College of Surgeons suggest that trauma victims with unstable vital signs should be taken to a Level I trauma center, where a larger volume of critically injured patients are seen.
  • Primary survey should be performed at the scene and en route.

Signs and Symptoms


  • Primary survey (ABCDE):
    • Airway, cervical spine:
      • Look, listen, and palpate from nose/mouth to trachea/bronchial tree.
      • Assess airway patency.
      • Evaluate gag reflex.
      • Cervical spine must be immobilized with significant mechanism of injury and either altered mental status or distracting injuries or with signs and symptoms suggestive of neck injury.
      • Ability to speak or effective movement of air with respiration indicates patency.
      • Gurgling, stridor, wheezing, snoring, choking, or absence of air movement requires immediate intervention.
      • Manage airway compromise before next step in primary survey.
    • Breathing:
      • Awake, alert patient with normal speech and good air movement suggests effective breathing.
      • Symmetric chest wall rise/fall, equal breath sounds, normal respiratory rate, and oxygen saturation at 95% or more suggest effective breathing.
      • Asymmetric chest movement, unequal breath sounds, abnormal respiratory rate, decreased oxygen saturation, inadequate air movement, or an obtunded patient suggests ineffective breathing.
      • Decreased unilateral breath sounds, tracheal shift, hyperexpansion, hyperresonance to percussion, subcutaneous air, hypoxia, or hemodynamic compromise raises concerns about tension pneumothorax.
      • Decreased breath sounds with dullness to percussion suggest hemothorax.
      • Manage patients immediately with needle thoracostomy followed by tube thoracostomy.
    • Circulation:
      • Adequate circulating blood volume must be maintained.
      • Primary assessment includes BP, heart rate, pulse quality, and end-organ function (e.g., mentation, urine output, capillary refill).
      • Tachycardia and oliguria indicate early shock; hypotension is a late finding and necessitates a search for hemorrhage
    • Disability:
      • Assess level of consciousness, gross motor function, and pupillary size/reactivity.
      • Glasgow Coma Scale is most commonly used; score of ≤8 indicates severe head injury/coma.
      • Spinal cord injuries are grossly assessed by observing movement of all extremities.
      • Pupillary size and reactivity to light measure brainstem function.
    • Exposure:
      • Patient should be undressed completely.
  • Secondary survey:
    • After the primary survey has been completed
    • Patient stabilized at each level
    • Complete physical exam from head to toe is performed.
    • "Tubes and fingers in every body cavity " 

History
The mechanism of injury, initial clinical presentation, suspected injuries, and treatment rendered should be elicited from EMS personnel. ‚  
Physical Exam
Initial stabilization should begin simultaneously with essential workup. ‚  

Essential Workup


  • Primary and secondary surveys
  • Cervical spine and chest radiographs are mandatory for victims of major trauma.
  • Pelvic radiographs should be performed with clinical suspicion of pelvic trauma or with hemodynamic instability.
  • Hemoglobin/hematocrit, ABG, blood type; a toxicology screen may also be considered.
  • Urine dip for blood
  • UA if dip shows positive result
  • Urine-based pregnancy test for any female patient of childbearing age

Diagnosis Tests & Interpretation


Lab
Baseline coagulation and chemistry studies with massive injury or hemorrhage ‚  
Imaging
  • Loss of consciousness, post-traumatic amnesia (anterograde or retrograde), or persistent altered level of consciousness is indication for head CT.
  • Significant blunt and penetrating chest trauma requires objective evaluation of the heart and great vessels with echocardiography, CT scan, angiography, or direct visualization.
  • Blunt abdominal trauma requires objective evaluation using US, abdominal CT, or diagnostic peritoneal lavage, depending on patients condition:
    • Hemodynamically stable patients should have an abdominal CT with IV contrast.
    • Unstable patients should have an abdominal ultrasound (FAST exam) or diagnostic peritoneal lavage.
    • Many centers now doing "Pan CT scan, "  including head, neck, chest, abdomen/pelvis in a single pass with IV contrast
    • Pan CT lowers missed injury rate but involves significant radiation exposure
  • Extremity injury:
    • Radiographs
    • Suspected vascular damage requires angiography or duplex ultrasound.

Differential Diagnosis


Some level of clinical suspicion should be maintained for other medical conditions leading to trauma (e.g., seizures, dysrhythmias). ‚  

Treatment


Initial Stabilization/Therapy


  • The initial treatment should parallel the primary survey with injuries treated before addressing the next assessment level.
  • Airway with cervical spine control:
    • Jaw thrust, suctioning, and oropharyngeal or nasopharyngeal airways provide initial airway support.
  • Rapid sequence intubation is the airway management option of choice for multiple trauma patients:
    • Insertion of an extraglottic airway (e.g., Combitube, laryngeal tube, or laryngeal mask airway) or cricothyroidotomy may be necessary.
    • Use of video laryngoscopy may allow endotracheal intubation with minimal impact on potential traumatic brain injury or an unstable cervical spine
  • Breathing:
    • 100% oxygen and respiratory monitoring
    • Tension pneumothorax should be diagnosed clinically and decompressed on an emergency basis with a needle thoracostomy below the axilla or above the 2nd rib in the midclavicular line.
    • Tube thoracostomy should follow.
    • Open chest wounds should be covered with an adherent dressing and a tube thoracostomy performed.
    • Respiratory distress from flail segment or pulmonary contusion should prompt early intubation with mechanical ventilation and positive end expiratory pressure.
    • Hyperventilation should be avoided except with impending herniation or intracranial HTN resistant to other therapies; end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring should be used.
  • Circulation:
    • 2 large-bore IV lines with constant hemodynamic and cardiac monitoring should be placed.
    • A thoracotomy may be considered in a previously stable patient with penetrating chest trauma and an acute deterioration in status
    • A Foley catheter can be placed to help monitor urine output but should be withheld if blood is present at the urethral open until additional imaging can be performed
  • Alternatives include central lines, venous cut-downs (e.g., saphenous or femoral), or intraosseous lines:
    • Aggressive fluid replacement with 3 parts fluid for every 1 part circulatory volume loss remains most widely recommended care; adjust fluids based on ongoing assessment:
      • 2 L initial bolus in adults, 20 mL/kg in children
      • Whole blood or autotransfused blood for hemorrhagic shock or uncontrolled bleeding
    • Pericardial tamponade requires emergent pericardiocentesis/pericardial window.
    • External bleeding should be managed with direct pressure.
    • Unstable pelvic fractures should be treated with pelvic binding
  • Disability:
    • Head injury with Glasgow Coma Scale score of ≤8 should initiate treatment for elevated intracranial pressure with mannitol or hypertonic saline, rapid-sequence intubation, oxygenation, and controlled ventilation to a PCO2 of 35 mm Hg.
    • Elevate head 20 " “30 ‚ °, maintaining spine immobilization.

Ed Treatment/Procedures


  • Definitive treatment is often surgical.
  • Prompt stabilization, early recognition of the need for operative intervention, and appropriate trauma surgical consultation are paramount.

Medication


Dictated by need for specific interventions ‚  
Intraosseous lines are an alternative to IV lines for fluids and medications. Lack of rib cervical spine fractures does not exclude spinal cord injury ‚  

Follow-Up


Disposition


Admission Criteria
  • Most major trauma patients should be admitted for observation, monitoring, and further evaluation.
  • Patients with significant injuries or hemodynamic instability should be admitted to an ICU.
  • Patients requiring frequent assessments should be admitted to a monitored setting.

Discharge Criteria
Patients with minor trauma and negative objective workup/imaging may be observed in the ED for several hours and then discharged. ‚  
Issues for Referral
The main indications for referral concern the availability of subspecialists, such as neurosurgeons, orthopedists/hand surgeons, otolaryngologists, plastic surgeons, or intensivists. ‚  

Followup Recommendations


Follow-up should be driven by the types of injuries and subspecialty care required. ‚  

Pearls and Pitfalls


  • The ABCs of trauma remain the standard approach to guide the initial assessment and treatment of trauma patients.
  • A high level of suspicion for occult injuries should be maintained, with a low threshold for obtaining objective imaging.
  • Trauma systems are defined by an organized approach to accessing quality trauma and subspecialty care.

Additional Reading


  • Committee on Trauma, American College of Surgeons. Resources for Optimal care of the Injured Patient. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2006.
  • Gin Shaw ‚  SL, Jordan ‚  RC. Multiple traumas. In: Marx ‚  J, ed. Rosens Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice. 5th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2002:242 " “255.
  • Krantz ‚  BE. Initial assessment. In: Feliciano ‚  DV, ed. Trauma. Stamford, CT: Appleton & Lange; 1996:123.

See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)


Specific Anatomic Injuries, Shock, Airway Management. ‚  

Codes


ICD9


  • 952.9 Unspecified site of spinal cord injury without evidence of spinal bone injury
  • 959.01 Head injury, unspecified
  • 959.8 Other specified sites, including multiple injury
  • 958.4 Traumatic shock

ICD10


  • S09.90XA Unspecified injury of head, initial encounter
  • S14.109A Unsp injury at unsp level of cervical spinal cord, init
  • T14.90 Injury, unspecified
  • T79.4XXA Traumatic shock, initial encounter

SNOMED


  • 417746004 traumatic injury (disorder)
  • 82271004 Injury of head (disorder)
  • 90584004 Spinal cord injury (disorder)
  • 64169002 traumatic shock (disorder)
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