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Onto this week's note--
This is an important topic and one that is quite personal to
me. I have had the unpleasant experience of witnessing motor vehicle accidents
and a suicide incident, and I have had to conduct rapid primary survey. There
is a lot of information to cover, but trust me, when you are the first source
of help on the scene a lot of it actually comes back naturally (adrenaline
helps a lot!) I’ve decided to cover rapid primary survey and resuscitation
together because they are usually carried out at the same time, followed by
detailed secondary survey and then definitive treatment.
Rapid Primary Survey (RPS):
·
Airway maintenance with C-spine control
o Always
assume cervical injury in trauma patients and immobilize with collar.
Requirements for clearing C-spine include NO midline tenderness, NO focal
neurological deficits, and NOT distracting factors like intoxication or altered
level of consciousness
o Assess
for signs of obstruction—agitation, confusion, “universal choking sign”,
respiratory distress, noisy breathing, failure to speak, dysphonia, cyanosis
o SECURE
AIRWAY
§
Basic airway management
·
Head-tilt (if C-spine injury not suspected) or
jaw thrust to open the airway
·
Sweep and suction to clear mouth of foreign material
§
Temporizing measures
·
Nasopharyngeal airway if conscious
·
Oropharyngeal airway if unconscious
·
“Rescue” airway devices such as laryngeal mask
airway
§
Definitive airway management
·
Endotracheal intubation with in-line
stabilization of C-spine
o Indications
for intubation
§
Patient unable to protect airway GCS < 8
§
Inadequate oxygenation with spontaneous
respiration (O2 sat < 90% with 100% O2 or rising pCO2)
§
Profound shock
§
Anticipatory—trauma, OD, CHF, asthma, COPD,
smoke inhalation injury
§
Anticipated transfer of critically ill patients
o Orotracheal—usually
done with rapid sequence induction
o Nasotracheal—better
tolerated in conscious patient
o Contraindicated
with basal skull fracture* or any supraglottic/glottic pathology that would
preclude successful intubation
o Does
not provide 100% protection against aspiration
·
Surgical airway such as cricothyroidotomy
·
Drugs can be delivered via ETT (NAVEL)—naloxone,
atropine, ventolin (salbutamol), epinephrine, lidocaine
·
Breathing and ventilation
o Classic
“look, listen, feel” and assess need for resuscitation
o Assess
respiratory rate, oximetry (< 90 warrants intervention), ABG
o Management
(in order of increasing FiO2)
§
Nasal prongs
§
Simple face mask
§
Non-rebreather mask
§
CPAP/BiPAP
§
Venturi mask—used to precisely control O2
delivery
§
Bag-valve mask and CPAP to supplement inadequate
ventilation
·
Circulation (pulses, hemorrhage control)
o Assess
pulse and need for CPR
o ALWAYS
watch for sign of SHOCK while doing the primary survey**
§
Early signs—tachypnea, tachycardia, narrow pulse
pressure, reduced capillary refill, cool extremities, and reduced central
venous pressure
§
Late signs—hypotension and altered mental
status, reduced urine output
Class
|
I
|
II
|
III
|
IV
|
Blood loss
|
< 750cc
|
750~1500cc
|
1500~2000cc
|
> 2000cc
|
% volume
|
< 15%
|
15~30%
|
30~40%
|
> 40%
|
Pulse
|
< 100
|
> 100
|
> 120
|
> 140
|
BP
|
Normal
|
Normal
|
Decreased
|
Decreased
|
RR
|
20
|
30
|
35
|
> 45
|
Capillary refill
|
Normal
|
Decreased
|
Decreased
|
Decreased
|
Urinary output
|
30cc/hr
|
20cc/hr
|
10cc/hr
|
None
|
Replacement
|
Crystalloid
|
Crystalloid
|
Crystalloid + blood
|
Crystalloid + blood
|
o Fluid
replacement
§
1~2L bolus of crystalloids (normal saline,
Ringer’s, Dextrose) with large bore IV (warm if possible)
§
Colloids (albumin, FFP) keeps fluids within
vessels and less permeated into interstitial space, leading to less total fluid
volume required (40~60% reduction of crystalloids), less tendency of fluid
overload, and shorter resuscitation time.
§
Packed RBC if hypotensive or if shock persists—blood
should ideally by cross-matched or type-specific but when not possible transfuse
O-negative in children and women of childbearing age; transfuse O-positive in
all others.
§
If patient doesn’t respond to fluids/transfusion
consider active internal bleeding (usually from ruptured spleen) and send for
surgical intervention.
§
Maintenance rate per hour = weight (kg) + 40
o Apply
direct pressure over any wounds, elevate extremities, and do not remove any
impaled objects.
·
Disability (neurological status)***
o Assess
consciousness using AVPU or GCS
§
AVPU (Alert Voice Pain Unresponsive)
·
Alert: The patient is fully awake (although not necessarily
oriented). = GCS 15
·
Voice: The patient makes some kind of response when talked
to, which could be in any of the three component measures of eyes, voice or
motor. = GCS 12
·
Pain: The patient makes a response to pain. = GCS 8
·
Unresponsive: Nonresponsive even to
pain. = GCS 3
§
Glascow Coma Scale
Eyes
|
Verbal
|
Motor
|
4 Spontaneous
|
5 Answers questions appropriately
|
6 Obeys commands
|
3 To voice
|
4 Confused, disoriented
|
5 Localizes to pain
|
2 To pain
|
3 Inappropriate words
|
4 Withdraws from pain
|
1 No response
|
2 Incomprehensible sounds
|
3 Decorticate (flexion)
|
|
1 No verbal response
|
2 Decerebrate (extension)
|
|
|
1 No response
|
·
Exposure (go over entire body to ensure no
injury is missed) and Environment (temperature control)
o Undress
patient completely and assess entire body for injury; logroll to examine back
o Digital
rectal exam to assess internal bleeding
o Keep
patient warm with a blanket or radiant heaters to avoid hypothermia
o Keep
care providers safe from contamination and combative patient
·
The above needs to be continually reassessed every
5~15 minutes during secondary survey
·
Monitoring
o O2,
BP, ECG
o Foley
catheter and NGT if indicated (NO NGT if significant mid-face trauma or basal
skull fracture; NO FOLEY if blood at urethral meatus, scrotal hematoma,
high-riding prostate on digital rectal exam)
·
Tests and investigations—CBC, electrolytes, BUN,
creatinine, glucose, amylase, INR/PTT, beta-hCG, toxicology screen, cross and
type
·
SIX KEY INJURIES TO EXCLUDE DURING PRIMARY
SURVEY (“At This Moment Find Ominous Conditions”)
o Airway
obstruction
o Tension
pneumothorax
o Massive
haemothorax
o Flail
chest
o Open
pneumothorax
o Cardiac
tamponade
*Tell-tale signs of base of skull fracture:
·
CSF leak from nose and/or ear
·
Bilateral periorbital bruising (“raccoon eyes”)
·
Haemotympanum and bruising behind the ear
(Battle’s sign)
**Treat shock as hemorrhagic shock unless proven otherwise.
The following is a general classification of various causes of shock:
Hypovolemic
|
Cardiogenic
|
Distributive
|
Obstructive
|
Hemorrhage
Severe burns
High output fistulas
Dehydration
|
Myocardial ischemia
Dysrhythmias
CHF
Cardiomyopathies
Cardiac valve problems
|
Septic
Anaphylactic
Neurogenic
|
Cardiac tamponade
Tension pneumothorax
Pulmonary embolism
Aortic stenosis
Constrictive pericarditis
|
***Toronto Notes 2016 includes the examination of pupils
during this stage.
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