Title: Patients With Traumatic Injuries
1Patients With Traumatic Injuries
- Condell Medical Center
- EMS System
- ECRN Packet
- CE Module II 2008
Prepared by Sharon Hopkins, RN, BSN, EMT-P
2Viewing Packets on the Website
- To see the packet in larger print or to review
the packet and you no longer have a paper copy,
go to the Condell website - www.condell.org/emergency/
- On right side of page choose ECRN CE
- This will take you immediately to the CE page and
then choose your year and module. - Contact your EMS office for a copy of the quiz.
- You must complete 4 modules per year to maintain
current ECRN licensure
3Objectives
- Upon successful completion of this module, the
ECRN should be able to - Identify the differences between a Category I, II
and III trauma patient - State EMS pre-hospital transport decisions for
trauma patients based on Region X guidelines - Understand what the mechanism of injury is and
the information it provides - Understand the difference between the index of
suspicion and the general impression
4Objectives contd
- Describe assessment and field treatment
appropriate for the patient with traumatic insult
based on Region X SOPs - Burns, tension pneumothorax, sucking chest wound,
flail chest, pericardial tamponade, eviscerated
organs - Understand where the landmark for chest needle
decompression - Review trauma scenarios
- Successfully calculate the GCS and RTS given the
patients parameters - Identify and appropriately state interventions
for a variety of EKG rhythms - Identify ST elevation on a 12 lead EKG
- Successfully complete the quiz with a score of
80 or better
5Leading Causes of Death
- In the age groups from 1 to 44, unintentional
injury is the leading cause of death - 45 and over, the leading causes of death are
disease - cardiovascular disease and cancers
- These statistics point to a financial burden
placed on the patient as well as society for
unintentional injuries - Source National Vital Statistics System,
National Center for Health Statistics, CDC
6Level I Trauma Centers
- Prepared and committed to handle all types of
specialty trauma 24/7 - Provides leadership and resources to other levels
of trauma care in the Region - Participates in data collection, research,
continuing education, and public education
programs - Level I Region X Evanston Hospital, St. Francis
in Evanston - Level I non-Region X Advocate Lutheran General,
Froedtert (Wisconsin)
7Level II Trauma Centers
- Increased commitment to trauma care for the most
common trauma emergencies with surgical
capability available 24/7 - Participates in data collection, continuing
education, and public education programs - Level II in Region X Condell, Glenbrook,
Highland Park, Lake Forest, Rush North Shore,
Vista Medical Center East (VMH)
8Additional Level II Trauma Centers -
Not Geographically In Region X
- Centegra McHenry, Illinois
- Good Shepherd Hospital (GSH) Barrington,
Illinois - Northwest Community Hospital (NWCH) Arlington
Heights
9Region X SOP -Trauma Transport
- Systolic B/P lt 90 on 2 consecutive readings (or
peds lt 80) - Transport to the highest level Trauma Center
within 25 minutes - 25 minute clock starts from the time of injury
10Region X SOP Trauma Transport
- Traumatic arrest, isolated burns gt20
- Transport to the closest Trauma Center
- No airway
- Transport to the closest Emergency Department
11Hospital on By-pass
- The closest appropriate hospital must still
accept any patient in a life-threatening
condition even if they are on by-pass
12Region X SOP Trauma Transport
- Category I Trauma Patient
- Unstable vital signs
- Based on anatomy of the injury
- Transport to the highest level Trauma Center
within 25 minutes - 25 minute clock starts from the time of injury
13Region X SOP Trauma Transport
- Category II Trauma Patient
- Based on mechanism of injury
- High potential for injury but patient is stable
for now - Based on existence of co-morbid factors that
increase the risk of complications to recovery - Transport to the closest Trauma Center
14Region X SOP Trauma Transport
- Category III Trauma Patient
- All other traumatic injuries and where routine
care is being provided - Isolated traumatic injury (generally GCS gt10)
- Isolated fractures
- Minor burns
- Lacerations
- Transport the patient to the closest Trauma Center
15Transport Decisions
- When possible, EMS and Medical Control are to
honor the patients request for hospital
destination
16Mechanism of Injury
- The process and forces that cause trauma
- Mentally recreate the incident from the evidence
noted - Identify strength of forces involved
- Identify direction forces came from
- Identify areas of the patients body most likely
affected by the forces - Start to identify the mechanism of injury during
the scene size-up
17Accepting The Radio Report
- Start forming a mental picture as you receive
report - You are mentally forming an opinion based on
mechanism of injury - Youll think differently for the patient who fell
5 feet versus 30 feet - Form a general impression based on the paramedic
report of mechanism of injury with their field
assessment
18Injury Patterns Pedestrians
- Adults
- Generally turn away present lateral surfaces
- Anatomically, impact is low on the body
- Injuries to tibia, fibula, femur, knee, lateral
chest, upper extremity, then head neck - Pediatrics
- Generally turn and face the vehicle
- Injuries anatomically higher on the body than
adults - Injuries to femur, pelvis and then those
sustained when run over or pushed aside by the
vehicle
19Injury Patterns Motor Vehicle
- Rotational (38 of MVC)
- Injuries similar to frontal lateral
- Deceleration is usually more gradual injuries
less serious although the vehicles look worse - Frontal (32 of MVC)
- Up and over the steering wheel pathway
- Femur fractures
- Blunt abdominal injury via compression
- Lower chest injuries after steering wheel impact
- Head neck injuries with windshield impact
20Injury Patterns Motor Vehicle
- Down and under the dashboard pathway
- Lower leg injuries from sliding under the dash
- Chest injuries with steering wheel impact
- Collapsed lungs from breath holding at time of
impact - Ejection
- 27 of fatalities
- 2 impacts with interior vehicle then the
objects outside the car (ground, trees, fences,
etc)
21Injury Patterns Motor Vehicle
- Lateral impact T-bone (15 of MVC 22 of all
MVC fatalities) - Much less structural steel for protection between
victim and impact site - Vehicle damage may not look severe but internal
injury potential is high - Upper lower extremity fractures on impact side
- Lateral compression with a large amount of
internal injury to chest abdominal organs - Unrestrained passengers are missiles and add to
injuries other passengers already sustained
22Injury Patterns Motor Vehicle
- Rear end (9 of MVC)
- Head rotates backward and then snaps forward
- Less neck injury if the head rest is properly
positioned - Rollover (6 of MVC)
- Occupant experiences impact every time vehicle
impacts a point on the ground - Vehicle sides and roof provide less crumple zones
for absorbing impact forces - Ejection is common in unrestrained persons
23Index of Suspicion
- Your anticipation of injury to a body, region,
organ, or structure based on identification of
the mechanism of injury - Your index of suspicion is honed from experience
and time on the job
24General impression
- Formed from mechanism of injury and index of
suspicion - Will guide the EMS provider regarding a direction
on how to proceed in caring for this patient
25Putting It All Together Sample
- Report
- The mechanism of injury is a frontal MVC
- ?The steering wheel is broken, chest wall is
bruised, breath sounds decreased on the right - Your index of suspicion is chest injury
- Your general impression is pneumothorax
26Documentation of The Complaint To Include
- O - onset
- P provocation/palliation
- Q - quality
- R - radiation
- S severity (0 10)
- T timing when did it start
27Documentation
- Provide answers to
- Who (the patient youre caring for)
- What (happened)
- When (did it happen)
- Where (which body part)
- How (did it occur)
28EMS Trauma Care Amputated Parts
- Routine trauma care
- To remove gross contamination, gently rinse with
normal saline - DO NOT use distilled water to irrigate open
wounds - Normal saline is isotonic and less harmful to
tissue - Cover stump with damp (normal saline) sterile
dressing and ace wrap - Ace provides uniform pressure to stump
- Cover wounds with sterile dressing
29EMS Care of Amputated Parts
- Place part in a plastic zip lock bag
- Place bag in larger bag or container over ice and
water - Do not ice the part alone
30EMS Pain Management Including for Adult Burns
- Morphine for pain control
- 2 mg slow IVP over 2 minutes
- May repeat every 2 minutes as needed to a maximum
of 10 mg - Watch for respiratory depression
- Monitor for a drop in blood pressure due to
vasodilation from the medication
31Adult Burns - Electrical
- Immobilize the patient
- High potential for traumatic injury
- Muscle spasms during contact with source
- Thrown when power source cut
- Assess for dysrhythmia place on cardiac monitor
- Assess distal neurovascular status of affected
part - Cover wounds with dry sterile dressings
32Adult Burns - Inhalation
- High risk for airway compromise
- Note presence of wheezing, hoarseness, stridor,
carbonaceous sputum, singed nasal hair - High flow oxygen via non-rebreather mask
- Monitor for need of advanced airway device
- ETT consider using ETT one size smaller than
normal due to potential swelling of the airway
33Adult Burns - Chemical
- HAZ-MAT team may be involved in the field
- If powdered chemical, first brush away excess dry
material - Clothing removed if possible
- Area flushed with sterile saline
- If eye involvement, remove contact lenses and
flush continuously with sterile saline - Avoid contamination of noninvolved areas
34EMS Care for Adult Burns - Thermal
- Superficial 1st degree
- Area cooled with sterile saline
- lt20 BSA involved, apply sterile saline soaked
dressings for transport - gt20 BSA, apply dry sterile dressing for
transport - Do not overcool major burns or apply ice directly
to burned areas
35Adult Burns - Thermal
- Partial or full thickness (2nd or 3rd degree)
- Wear sterile gloves and mask while burn areas are
exposed - Decreases additional risk of wound contamination
- Cover burn wound with dry sterile dressings
- Preventing air flow over exposed burn areas
reduces pain levels - EMS will place a clean sheet over the patient
- Protect the patient from hypothermia
36Infant differences back 13, each buttocks
2.5, each entire leg 14
37Case Study 1
- Adult patient reached over a charcoal grill just
as the match was thrown onto the soaked coals - Injury is restricted to the right forearm
- What type of burn is this?
- Using the Rule of Nines, what is the TSBA burned?
- What type of care is appropriate?
- How can the pain be managed?
- What does the documentation look like?
38Case Study 1 Patient with Burns
Skin is reddened and some blistering is present
39Case Study 1 Category III
- Combination of superficial and partial thickness
burns approx 4.5 TSBA (circumferential around
forearm) - Evidence of redness with a blistered area
although blister is broken - Appropriate care includes cooling burn, applying
sterile saline soaked dressing (lt20 TBSA) - Additional helpful care
- Elevation of arm, removal of ring before fingers
swell - For pain control
- Morphine 2 mg slow IVP can repeat 2 mg in 2
minutes up to 10 mg
40Chest Injuries Traumatic Arrest Category I
Trauma
- Begin CPR
- Transport to closest Trauma Center
- A hospital on by-pass must take a patient in life
threatening condition if they are the closest
appropriate hospital - EMS to perform bilateral chest decompression
- Use common sense does the scene size up,
evaluation of mechanism of injury and general
impression indicate a potential chest wall injury?
41Chest Injuries Tension Pneumothorax Category
I Trauma
- History of injury to the chest wall
- On rare occasions can be spontaneous
- Diminished breath sounds
- Hyperresonance if percussion done
- Severe dyspnea
- Hyperinflation of chest
- Jugular vein distention
- Tachycardia
- Hypotension
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43In-field Needle Decompression
- Landmarks anterior approach
- 2nd intercostal space in the midline of the
clavicles - Place prepared flutter valve needle over the top
of the rib - Avoids potential injury to vessels and nerves
that run along the bottom of the rib
44Quick Way to Find 2nd ICS
- Feel for the top of the sternum
- Roll your finger tip to the anterior surface at
the top of the sternum - Feel the little bump near the top of the sternum
- This bump is the Angle of Louis
- From the Angle of Louis slide your fingers angled
slightly downward toward the affected side
following the rib space - You are automatically in the 2nd ICS
- Identify the midline of the clavicle
- The midline is more lateral than persons realize
and usually runs in line with the nipple
45Alternate Method to Find 2nd Intercostal Space
- Palpate the clavicle and find the midline
- The midline is farther out (more lateral) from
the sternum than most persons realize - Move your finger tips under the clavicle into the
1st intercostal space - 1st rib is under the clavicle and is not palpated
- Spaces identified for the numbered rib above the
space - Feel for the firm 2nd rib and palpate the soft
space below the rib - This is the 2nd ICS
46Field Equipment
- Long needle (preferably 2-3 inch) and large bore
needle (preferably 12-14G) - Flutter valve finger cut from a glove
- Cleanser to prepare skin overlying the site
- Method to secure needle in place
- Skin will most likely be diaphoretic
- Tape may not stick
- May need to maintain manual control of needle
47Skin Preparation
Midline of clavicle
2nd ICS
Angle of Louis
48Inserting the Needle
- Remove proximal end cap
from needle if present - Will be able to hear trapped air escaping
- Needle inserted over top of rib
- Once hiss of air heard continue to advance
catheter while withdrawing stylet - Stabilize catheter as best as possible
- Patient should symptomatically improve
- Do not expect to hear improved breath sounds
takes time for the lung to reexpand
49Case Study 2
- EMS is called to the scene for a 52 year-old male
with c/o sudden onset dyspnea with pain between
his shoulder blades while watching TV at home.
The patient is agitated, short of breath, with
increased respiratory rate and SaO2 of 89. - Further assessment reveals decreased breath
sounds on the right and clear on the left - Vital signs 98/62 HR 118 RR 32 and shallow
- Your impression intervention plan?
50Case Study 2
- Spontaneous tension pneumothorax
- They dont all develop from trauma
- Supplemental oxygen support via non-rebreather,
cardiac monitor, preparation for IV - BUT
- This patient needs needle decompression while the
above are being prepared - Patients with a tension pneumothorax cant wait
and will deteriorate without needle decompression
51Sucking Chest Wound Category I Trauma
- Most common with penetrating wounds
- Free passage of air between the atmosphere and
pleural space if the open wound is at least 2/3rd
the size of the diameter of the trachea - Size of trachea about the size of pts 5th finger
- Air is drawn into the chest cavity, not into the
lungs - Air replaces lung tissue
- Lung collapses
52Sucking Chest Wound
- Severe dyspnea
- Open chest wound
- Check anterior, posterior, axilla areas
- Frothy blood at wound opening
- Sucking sound as air moves in and out
- Tachycardia with hypovolemia
53Treatment Sucking Chest Wound
- Immediate treatment is to seal the opening
- May start by placing a gloved hand over the wound
- When able, place an occlusive dressing, taped on
3 sides, over the wound - Wound now converted to a closed pneumothorax
- Monitor for signs of tension pneumothorax
- May need to lift a corner of the dressing to
release trapped air via burping dressing
54Flail Chest Category I Trauma
- 3 or more adjacent ribs broken in 2 or more
places - Segment becomes free with pardoxical chest wall
motion during respirations - Paradoxical movement more evident after the
muscles splinting the flail segment fatigue - Usually takes a tremendous amount of blunt trauma
to cause a flail chest - Associated severe underlying injury (ie
pulmonary contusion) will often be present - Respiratory volume reduced and respiratory effort
increased
55Treatment Flail Chest
- Place patient on the injured side (may not be
possible to do this in the field based on
mechanism of injury) - High flow oxygen non-rebreather mask
- Monitor for need to assist ventilations via BVM
to deliver positive pressure ventilations - Evidence of underlying pulmonary injury
- Effort and fatigue
- Pulse oximetry
- EKG monitoring
- Tremendous amount of force is delivered to the
chest wall and cardiac injury is highly likely as
a result
56Pericardial Tamponade Category I Trauma
- Blood or other fluid fills the pericardial sac
restricting cardiac filling contractility - Most often related to penetrating trauma
- Venous return to the heart is restricted
- Decreased cardiac output
- Pressure on the coronary arteries restricts blood
flow to the myocardium
57Pericardial Tamponade Signs Symptoms
- Usually history of penetrating trauma
- Agitated patient
- Diminished strength of pulses (weak and thready)
with tachycardia - Narrowing pulse pressure
- Diastolic systolic numbers moving closer
together - Distended neck veins (JVD)
- Diaphoretic and pale
- Muffled, distant heart tones
- Hypotension
58Treatment Pericardial Tamponade
- Treatment in the field is limited to being
supportive - Patient requires high index of suspicion and/or
rapid identification with rapid transport - In ED will perform needle thoracentesis and then
transfer the patient to the OR for open heart
surgery
59General Assessment Pearls
- Restlessness and agitation
- You must consider ?hypoxia, ?shock, ?influence of
alcohol and/or drugs - This is one time you need to assess for all
reasons of restlessness and not just stop when
you discovered one cause there may be more than
one pathology going on at a time
60Evaluation Pearls Low SaO2
- SaO2 reading may be inaccurate in the presence
of - Hemorrhagic shock with delayed capillary refill
- Hypothermia
- Lung damage
- Evaluate all parameters together to get the best
overall picture in ventilated patient - What does the ETCO2 indicate?
- Are you able to ventilate the patient?
- Are there extenuating circumstances where the
circulation is affected and would affect the
pulse ox reading like those listed above?
61More Case Studies
62Case Study 3
- Your 34 year-old patient received a GSW to the
right upper abdomen. - They are conscious and alert B/P 90/62 HR 120
RR 28 bleeding is minimal - Category trauma?
- What interventions are appropriate in field?
63Case Study 3 Category I Trauma
- Consider need for spinal immobilization
- During assessment of wound, consider thoracic
injury in addition to abdominal injury depending
on the angle of the GSW. - Examine for an exit wound
- Check the back and the axilla
- Prepare for the worst assume the patient will
deteriorate before ED arrival - Repeat VS B/P 80/ HR 140 RR 32, remains
conscious and in pain - Category I is transported to the highest level
Trauma Center within 25 minutes
64Case Study 3 - Treatment
- Routine trauma care
- Question is this an isolated abdominal wound or
is it a combination abdominal/ chest wound? - Need to treat patient for potential injuries of
both body cavities - EMS cannot determine in the field the angle of
the trajectory - Cover the wound and watch for evisceration
- Fluid resuscitation keep B/P at low levels the
higher the B/P the faster the patient bleeds out
65Case Study 4
- A 10 year-old patient has a
penetrating injury to
the right leg near the knee
while playing in his backyard - Initial VS B/P 90/70 HR
130 RR 32 no active
bleeding - Category trauma? Field interventions?
66Case Study 4 Category III
- Next VS B/P 92/64 HR 110 RR 20.
- Stabilize foreign body in place (gauze, trauma
dressing) - Obtain distal neurovascular status
- Distal pulses
- Movement can you wiggle your toes?
- Sensation close your eyes and tell me which
toe I am touching - Document distal neurovascular status and describe
how the foreign object is stabilized in place
67Case Study 5
- Your 62 year-old patient had abdominal surgery 1
week ago. Today at home he sneezed hard and felt
a tearing
sensation in his
abdomen and
called EMS. - VS B/P 100/60
HR 110 RR 24 - No active
bleeding - What
interventions
are appropriate
in
the field?
68Case Study 5 - Interventions
- Immediately cover the wound
- Need to minimize contamination
- Need to prevent more organs from protruding
- Need to prevent loss of fluids
- Place a saline moistened dressing over the
exposed tissue - Place dry gauze over the saline dressings
- Can place light manual control over the organs to
prevent further evisceration especially during
movement, coughing, sneezing, deep breaths
69Case Study 6
- Your 45 year-old patient is a construction worker
who was accidentally shot in the head with a nail
gun - Upon EMS arrival, the patient is awake, alert,
talking (GCS 15) - VS B/P 132/78 HR 96 RR 20 complains of a
minor headache minimal bleeding at a few
puncture wounds noted on the occipital area of
the scalp (patient has thick hair).
70X-ray from EDNo deficitsnoted
71Case Study 6 - Treatment
- Consider any injury above the level of the
clavicles to include a c-spine injury until
proven otherwise and immobilize the patient - Control bleeding
- The face and scalp have such a rich blood supply
small wounds tend to bleed heavily - Protect from further contamination
- The open wound may be in direct contact with the
brain - Document neurological evaluation to establish
baseline for comparison (AVPU, GCS, movement)
72Case Study 7
- EMS was called to the scene for a 10 year-old
female who has been run over by a bus - As patient exited bus, she bent down to tie her
shoe and was caught under the wheels of the bus - EMS noted a large amount of avulsed tissue with
bleeding from the left hip, left buttock, and
left upper thigh area - The patient is screaming in pain
- VS B/P 110/70 HR 110 RR 26 GCS 15
- What is your impression?
- What is your treatment plan?
7310 y/o run over by bus
74Case Study 7 Category I or II?
- General impression
- Category II minimally pedestrian run-over
- Category I trauma if unstable pelvis or 2 or
more long bones (proximal bones) fractured or
unstable vital signs - Potential problems to consider address
- Massive hemorrhage control of hemorrhage
- Spinal injury
- Additional injuries
- Airway control
- Equipment to fit a 10 year-old
- Further wound contamination
751 year F/U with skin grafts
76Glasgow Coma Scale GSCReview and Practice
- Tool used to evaluate and monitor a patients
condition - Evaluates
- Best eye opening
- Best verbal response
- Best motor response
- Serves as an indicator/predictor of survival
- To be obtained on all EMS patients
77GCS
- Possible total score 3 (lowest) 15 (highest)
- Minor head injury patient scores 13 15
- Moderate head injury patient scores 9 12
- Severe head injury patient scores lt8
- Significant mortality risk
78GCS Pearls
- The change in the GCS is more important than the
absolute score - Check for associated injuries
- Manage a head injury as a multiple injured
patient until other injuries ruled out - Stabilize the neck for any head injury
- Dont assume the level of consciousness is
altered just because of ETOH and/or drugs - Is there an occult (hidden) injury present?
- Provide accurate, clear, detailed documentation
79GCS Eye Opening 1-4 Points
- Spontaneous (4) eyes open may or may not focus
- To voice (3) prior to touching the patient,
eyes will open to sounds around them
calling/yelling to them to open eyes - Often difficult to accurately assess due to EMS
gaining immediate c-spine control so difficult at
times to determine if patient responded to voice
or touch (pain). Eyelid flutter to voice is 3
points - To pain (2) doesnt necessarily imply you must
apply painful stimulus, could be just to touch - Flutter of eyelids when touched is scored as 2
- None (1) eyes remain closed with no eyelid
flutter or other eye movement eyes do not open
80Whats the Eye Opening Score?
- When the patient is asked to open their eyes,
they refuse and actually close them tighter - What is their eye opening?
- The score is 3 (dont open their eyes but there
is eyelid movement to voice command) - Later, if the patient is more cooperative and
then open their eyes, their GCS will improve - MAKE SENSE?
81GCS Verbal Response 1-5 Points
- Oriented (5)
- Confused (4)
- Words may be appropriate to situation but pt does
not respond to questions - Inappropriate words (3)
- Words are spoken and understood but nonsensical
to the situation (over there) - Incomprehensible words (2)
- Includes mumbling, unintelligible speech,
moaning, groaning - None (1)
82Whats the Verbal Response Score?
- You have touched the patients injured arm and
the patient yells stop, ow, dont youre hurting
me - The patient does not carry on any other
conversation with you - The comments were appropriate for the situation
but the patient is not oriented nor are the words
inappropriate. - So by default this patient is scored a 4 for
confused
83GCS Motor Response 1-6 Points
- Obeys command (6)
- Localizes pain (5)
- Patient who pulls equipment off pushes your
hands away purposeful movement - This patient knows where the obnoxious stimuli is
contacting his body - Withdraws to pain (4)
- Pt cannot isolate where they feel the noxious
stimuli so just pulls back/withdraws - Flexion (3) arms bent towards midline when
stimulated (decorticate) - Extension (2) arms extended when stimulated
(decerebrate) - None (1) remains flaccid
84Whats the Motor Response Score?
- This patient is constantly trying to pull off the
cervical collar, take off the B/P cuff, and pull
out the IV (you call this uncooperative) - This patient is aware of what part of the body is
feeling some noxious stimuli so they are trying
to get rid of it/escape from it - This is purposeful movement (the patient
localizes the annoyance) and is scored 5
85GCS Pearls
- Give the patient the best score possible
- If the patient moves the right side of their body
but no movement on their left, score them for the
movement they currently exhibit on the right - If patient deteriorates, easier to see the drop
or change in the GCS score - When testing for responses, watch even for
minimal activity like eyelid flutter or a grimace
86GCS Pearls
- Acceptable noxious stimuli
- Armpit pinch or nailbed pressure
- Sternal rub, pinching web space between fingers,
pinching shoulder muscle (trapezius) - Earlobe pinch is out of favor
- Can cause movement of head neck in response to
the pain
87GCS and RTS Tools
- See end of document for full size print of the
GCS and RTS forms - This information is also on the radio run report
- The ECRN is to fill out a GCS score on every EMS
call - The ECRN calculates the RTS on every trauma
patient
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89RTS Scoring 0 12 points
90Practice GCS and RTS
- Calculate the scores for the next 6 cases
- Assign GCS (3 15 points)
- RTS
- Convert the raw GCS number to its respective
score 0 4 - Add the converted GCS number to the points (0
4) for the respiratory rate and systolic B/P - Determine the RTS (0 12 points)
91GCS RTS Practice 1
- Patient eyes are open and they watch you during
the examination - The patient is confused they dont remember how
they got hurt and cant remember the day of the
week - When you ask the patient to show me 2 fingers,
they respond but are slow to do so - VS B/P 120/70 HR 88 RR 18
- Total GCS?
- Total RTS?
92Practice 1
- Total GCS 14
- Eye opening 4 (spontaneous)
- Verbal response 4 (confused)
- Motor response 6 (follows commands)
- Converted GCS 4
- Respiratory rate 4
- Systolic B/P 4
- Total RTS - 12
93GCS RTS Practice 2
- The patient does not open their eyes
- The patient groans when pinched or an injured
body part is touched - The patient does not follow commands and will
push your hands away when you touch them - VS B/P 96/68 HR 102 RR 22
- Total GCS?
- Total RTS?
94Practice 2
- Total GCS - 8
- Eye opening 1 (none)
- Verbal response - 2 (groans)
- Motor response 5 (pushes you away)
- Converted GCS - 2
- Respiratory rate - 4
- Systolic B/P - 4
- Total RTS - 10
95GCS RTS Practice 3
- The patients eyes are open
- When asked what month is this?, the patient
responds, he, umm, hemy jacket. I dont .. - If touched or pinched, the patient pulls away
from the contact - VS B/P 132/72 HR 96 RR 16
- Total GCS?
- Total RTS?
96Practice 3
- Total GCS 11
- Eye opening 4 (spontaneous)
- Verbal response 3 (inappropriate words)
- Motor response 4 (pulls away/withdraws)
- Converted GCS -3
- Respiratory rate - 4
- Systolic B/P - 4
- Total RTS - 11
97GCS RTS Practice 4
- Your patients eyes are closed but they open wide
if the patients injury is touched - The patient yells dont or stop when there
are pinched but does not answer questions or
speak in sentences - The patient will push your hands away when you
touch them or try to put on equipment - VS B/P 108/64 HR 102 RR 18
- Total GCS?
- Total RTS?
98Practice 4
- Total GCS - 11
- Eye opening 2 (opens when touched pain)
- Verbal response 4 (appropriate to being touched
but doesnt carry on a conversation marked
confusion) - Motor response 5 (pushes you away)
- Converted GCS -3
- Respiratory rate - 4
- Systolic B/P - 4
- Total RTS - 11
99GCS RTS Practice 5
- The patients eyes are closed but the eyelids
flutter when you loudly call out their name - The patient does not answer questions but will
groan when touched but not say recognizable words - The patient does not follow commands but will
push away your hands when touched - VS B/P 80/52 HR 112 RR 12
- Total GCS?
- Total RTS?
100Practice 5
- Total GCS - 10
- Eye opening 3 (eyelids flutter to voice)
- Verbal response 2 (groans)
- Motor response 5 (pushes you away purposeful
movement) - Converted GCS - 3
- Respiratory rate - 4
- Systolic B/P - 3
- Total RTS - 10
101GSC RTS Practice 6
- The patients eyes are closed but will open when
the patient is touched - The patient says leave me alone and what are
you doing? and goes back to sleep. When eyes are
open they respond I dont know to questions - They do not follow command and will push your
hands away when touched - VS B/P 110/68 HR 88 RR 20
- Total GCS?
- Total RTS?
102Practice 6
- Total GCS - 11
- Eye opening 2 (opens to touch pain)
- Verbal response 4 (appropriate to the situation
but not oriented marked confusion) - Motor response 5 (pushes you away)
- Converted GCS - 3
- Respiratory rate - 4
- Systolic B/P - 4
- Total RTS - 11
103Practice Rhythm Strip Identification and ID of ST
elevation on 12 Lead
- Identify the lead II strip and think over the SOP
treatment appropriate if the patient is
symptomatic - Identify the leads/location of the ST elevation
- At CMC check the bulletin board outside the EMS
office for Cardiac Alert write-ups and more
examples of ST elevation
104Identify Rhythm Strip 1
105Strip 1
- Second degree Type I Wenckebach
- PR interval gets longer, longer, longer and then
there is a dropped QRS - The PR interval resets and the cycle starts again
- Type I drops one
- Wenckebach winks at you
- Notice grouped beating (group and a space, group
and a space) - Patient usually not symptomatic
106Treatment IF Symptomatic Bradycardia
- Bradycardia or Type I Wenckebach
- Atropine 0.5 mg rapid IVP (when theyre alive
give 0.5) - May repeat every 3-5 minutes to total of 3mg
- If ineffective, begin pacing
- Type II or 3rd degree heart block
- Begin TCP
- Valium 2 mg slow IVP for discomfort
- May repeat 2 mg IVP every 2 minutes to max 10 mg
- TCP set at rate 80/minute and start at lowest mA
- Watch for capture
- If TCP not effective, give Atropine 0.5 mg rapid
IVP - May repeat Atropine 0.5 mg every 3-5 minutes max
3mg
107Identify Rhythm Strip 2 6
second strip
108Strip 2 - Sinus Rhythm
- No treatment necessary for this rhythm
- Treat the patients complaint
- IF ACS complaint, then ACS SOP
- Aspirin 324 mg chewed (faster absorption)
- Nitroglycerin 0.4 mg sl
- May repeat in 5 minutes watch B/P
- Screen for recent Viagra type drug usage
- Morphine if 2nd NTG dose not effective
- 2 mg slow IVP
- May repeat every 2 minutes to max 10 mg
109Identify Rhythm Strip 3 6 second
strip
110Strip 3 Atrial fibrillation
- A risk associated with atrial fibrillation is
stroke - Clots form and are stagnant in the atria
- Clots can break off and migrate into the
circulation - Important with new onset atrial fibrillation to
determine how long they have been in it to guide
therapies - gt48 hours higher risk of throwing a clot if
rhythm converted to sinus rhythm
111EMS Treatment Rapid Atrial Fibrillation
- Symptoms most likely dependent on the heart rate
- The faster the heart rate, the less tolerable the
rhythm is especially for elderly patients - Stable patient with B/P gt100 mmHg
- Verapamil 5mg SLOW IVP over 2 minutes
- If no response in 15 minutes B/P stable, repeat
5mg SLOW IVP over 2 minutes - Unstable patient with B/P lt100 mmHg
- Contact Medical Control for direction
1121 Identify ST Elevation
1132 Identify ST elevation
1143 Identify ST Elevation
115ST Elevation Answer Key Evaluate the 3 12 Lead
EKG Examples at the end of the packet
- EKG 1 Leads V 1 - 4
- EKG 2 Leads V 2 - 5
- EKG 3 Leads II, III, aVF
116Bibliography
- Bledsoe, B., Porter, R., Cherry, R. Paramedic
- Care Principles Practices 2nd Edition
Brady. - 2006.
- ITLS Bulletin. Case Study ITLS Patient ETCO2.
- June 2008.
- Region X SOPs Eff date March 1, 2007 Revised
January - 2008.
- www.chems.alaska.gov/ems/document/GCS
- www.merck.com
- www.swsahs.nsw.gov.au/