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Thoracic Trauma

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... inhales * Cardiac Tamponade Management Secure airway High concentration O2 Rapid transport Definitive treatment is pericardiocentesis followed by surgery ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thoracic Trauma


1
Thoracic Trauma
  • Temple College
  • EMS Professions

2
Chest Trauma
  • Second leading cause of trauma deaths after head
    injury
  • About 20 of all trauma deaths

3
Chest Trauma
  • Initial exam directed toward
  • Open pneumothorax
  • Flail chest
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Massive hemothorax
  • Cardiac tamponade

4
Rib Fracture
  • Most common chest injury
  • More common in adults than children
  • Especially common in elderly
  • Ribs form rings
  • Consider possibility of break in two places

5
Rib Fracture
  • Most commonly 5th to 9th ribs
  • Poor protection

6
Rib Fracture
  • Fractures of 1st, 2nd ribs require high force
  • Frequently have injury to aorta or bronchi
  • 30 will die

7
Rib Fracture
  • Fractures of 8th to 12th ribs can damage
    underlying abdominal solid organs
  • Liver
  • Spleen
  • Kidneys

8
Rib Fracture
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Localized pain, tenderness
  • Increases when patient
  • Coughs
  • Moves
  • Breathes deeply
  • Chest wall instability
  • Deformity, discoloration
  • Associated pneumo or hemothorax

9
Rib Fracture
  • Management
  • High concentration O2
  • Splint using pillow, swathes
  • Encourage patient to breath deeply

10
Rib Fracture
  • Management
  • Monitor elderly and COPD patients carefully
  • Broken ribs can cause decompensation
  • Patients will fail to breath deeply and cough,
    resulting in poor clearance of secretions

11
Flail Chest
  • Two or more adjacent ribs broken in two or more
    places
  • Produces free-floating chest wall segment
  • Usually secondary to blunt trauma
  • More common in older patients

12
Flail Chest
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Paradoxical movement
  • May NOT be present initially due to intercostal
    muscle spasms
  • Be suspicious in any patient with chest wall
  • Tenderness
  • Crepitus

13
Flail Chest
  • Consequences
  • Pain, leading to decreased ventilation
  • Increased work of breathing
  • Contusion of lung

14
Flail Chest
  • Management
  • Establish airway
  • Suspect spinal injuries
  • Assist ventilation with BVM and oxygen
  • Stabilize chest wall

15
Simple Pneumothorax
  • Air in pleural space
  • Partial or complete lung collapse occurs

16
Simple Pneumothorax
  • Causes
  • Chest wall penetration
  • Fractured rib lacerating lung
  • Paper bag effect
  • May occur spontaneously following
  • Exertion
  • Coughing
  • Air Travel

17
Simple Pneumothorax
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Pain on inhalation
  • Difficulty breathing
  • Tachypnea
  • Decreased or absent breath sounds

Severity of symptoms depends on size of
pneumothorax, speed of lung collapse, and
patients health status
18
Simple Pneumothorax
  • Management
  • Establish airway
  • Suspect spinal injury based on mechanism
  • High concentration O2 with NRB
  • Assist decreased or rapid respirations with BVM
  • Monitor for tension pneumothorax

19
Open Pneumothorax
  • Hole in chest wall
  • Allows air to enter pleural space
  • Larger hole Greater chance air will enter there
    than through trachea

Sucking Chest Wound
20
Open Pneumothorax
  • Management
  • Close hole with occlusive dressing
  • High concentration O2
  • Assist ventilations
  • Consider transport on injured side
  • Monitor for tension pneumothorax

21
Tension Pneumothorax
  • One-way valve forms in lung or chest wall
  • Air enters pleural space cannot leave
  • Air is trapped in pleural space
  • Pressure rises
  • Pressure collapses lung

22
Tension Pneumothorax
  • Trapped air pushes heart, lungs away from injured
    side
  • Vena cavae become kinked
  • Blood cannot return to heart
  • Cardiac output falls

23
Tension Pneumothorax
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Extreme dyspnea
  • Restlessness, anxiety, agitation
  • Decreased breath sounds
  • Hyperresonance to percussion
  • Cyanosis
  • Subcutaneous emphysema

24
Tension Pneumothorax
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Rapid, weak pulse
  • Decreased BP
  • Tracheal shift away from injured side
  • Jugular vein distension

Early dyspnea/hypoxia - Late shock
25
Tension Pneumothorax
  • Management
  • Secure airway
  • High concentration O2 with NRB
  • If available, request ALS intercept for pleural
    decompression

26
Hemothorax
  • Blood in pleura space
  • Most common result of major chest wall trauma
  • Present in 70 to 80 of penetrating, major
    non-penetrating chest trauma

27
Hemothorax
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Rapid, weak pulse
  • Cool, clammy skin
  • Restlessness, anxiety
  • Thirst
  • Chills
  • Hypotension
  • Collapsed neck veins

28
Hemothorax
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Decreased breath sounds
  • Dullness to percussion
  • Dyspnea
  • Ventilatory failure

Shock precedes ventilatory failure
29
Hemothorax
  • Management
  • Secure airway
  • Assist breathing with high concentration O2
  • Rapid transport

30
Traumatic Asphyxia
  • Blunt force to chest causes
  • Increased intrathoracic pressure
  • Backward flow of blood out of heart into vessels
    of upper chest, neck, head

31
Traumatic Asphyxia
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Possible sternal fracture or central flail chest
  • Shock
  • Purplish-red discoloration of
  • Head
  • Neck
  • Shoulders
  • Blood shot, protruding eyes
  • Swollen, cyanotic lips

32
Traumatic Asphyxia
  • Name given because patients looked like they had
    been strangled or hanged

33
Traumatic Asphyxia
  • Management
  • Airway with C-spine control
  • Assist ventilations with high concentration O2
  • Spinal stabilization
  • Rapid transport

34
Cardiovascular Trauma
  • Any patient with significant blunt or penetrating
    trauma to chest has heart/great vessel injury
    until proven otherwise

35
Myocardial Contusion
  • Bruise of heart muscle
  • Most common blunt cardiac injury
  • Usually due to steering wheel impact

36
Myocardial Contusion
  • Behaves like acute MI
  • May produce arrhythmias
  • May cause cardiogenic shock, hypotension

37
Myocardial Contusion
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Cardiac arrhythmias after blunt chest trauma
  • Angina-like pain unresponsive to nitroglycerin
  • Chest pain independent of respiratory movement

Suspect in all blunt chest trauma
38
Myocardial Contusion
  • Management
  • High concentration O2
  • Transport
  • Consider ALS intercept

39
Cardiac Tamponade
  • Rapid accumulation of blood in space between
    heart, pericardium
  • Heart compressed
  • Blood entering heart decreases
  • Cardiac output falls

40
Cardiac Tamponade
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Hypotension unresponsive to treatment
  • Increased central venous pressure (distended
    neck/arm veins in presence of decreased arterial
    BP)
  • Small quiet heart (decreased heart sounds)

Becks Triad
41
Cardiac Tamponade
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Narrowing pulse pressure
  • Pulsus paradoxicus
  • Radial pulse becomes weak or disappears when
    patient inhales

42
Cardiac Tamponade
  • Management
  • Secure airway
  • High concentration O2
  • Rapid transport
  • Definitive treatment is pericardiocentesis
    followed by surgery

43
Traumatic Aortic Aneurysm
  • Caused by sudden decelerations, massive blunt
    force
  • Vehicle collisions
  • Falls from heights
  • Crushing chest trauma
  • Blunt chest trauma
  • Animal kicks

44
Traumatic Aortic Aneurysm
  • Rupture usually occurs just beyond left
    subclavian artery
  • Attachment of aorta to pulmonary artery at this
    point produces shearing force on aortic arch

45
Traumatic Aortic Aneurysm
  • Signs and Symptoms
  • Increased BP in arms in absence of head injury
  • Decreased femoral pulses with full arm pulses
  • Respiratory distress
  • Ache in chest, shoulders, lower back, abdomen.
    (Only 25 of patients)

Detection requires high index of suspicion
46
Traumatic Aortic Aneurysm
  • Management
  • High concentration oxygen
  • Assist ventilation
  • Suspect spinal injury
  • Rapid transport

47
Associated Abdominal Trauma
  • Diaphragm forms dome that extends up into rib
    cage
  • Trauma to chest below 4th rib Abdominal injury
    until proven otherwise

48
PowerPoint Source
  • Slides for this presentation from Temple College
    EMS http//www.templejc.edu/dept/ems/pages/power
    point.html
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