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Thoracic Trauma

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Stress the importance of anticipating serious chest trauma or the potential for life-threatening injury even before deterioration has occurred. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thoracic Trauma


1
Chapter 6 Thoracic Trauma
2
Thoracic Trauma
3
Overview
  • Major signs and symptoms
  • Immediate life-threatening injuries
  • Pathophysiology and management
  • Open pneumothorax
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Massive hemothorax
  • Flail chest
  • Cardiac tamponade
  • Cardiac involvement with blunt injury
  • Other thoracic injuries

4
Thoracic Trauma
  • Thoracic injury is common.
  • 50 of multiple trauma
  • 25 of trauma deaths
  • Potentially fatal thoracic injuries saved by
    rapid recognition and intervention.
  • Many require surgical intervention

5
Chest Anatomy
6
Mechanism of Injury
  • Blunt
  • Direct compression
  • Fracture of solid organs
  • Blowout of hollow organs
  • Deceleration forces
  • Tearing of organs and blood vessels
  • Penetrating
  • Direct trauma to organ and vasculature
  • Energy transmitted from mass and velocity

7
Tissue Hypoxia
  • Inadequate oxygen delivery
  • Hypovolemia
  • Ventilation/perfusion mismatch
  • Pleural pressure changes
  • Pump failure

8
Thoracic Trauma
  • Signs and symptoms
  • Shortness of breath
  • Chest pain
  • Hemoptysis
  • Cyanosis
  • Neck veins distended
  • Tracheal deviation
  • Asymmetrical movement
  • Chest wall contusion
  • Open wounds
  • Subcutaneous emphysema
  • Shock
  • Tenderness, instability, crepitation (TIC)
  • Breath sounds abnormal

9
ITLS Primary Survey
  • Deadly Dozen
  • Airway obstruction
  • Open pneumothorax
  • Flail chest
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Massive hemothorax
  • Cardiac tamponade

10
ITLS Secondary Survey
  • Deadly Dozen
  • Myocardial contusion
  • Traumatic aortic rupture
  • Tracheal or bronchial tree injury
  • Diaphragmatic tears
  • Esophageal injury
  • Pulmonary contusion

11
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Airway obstruction
  • Secondary hypoxia
  • Common cause of preventable death
  • Foreign body, tongue, aspiration
  • Always assume cervical spine injury

12
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Open pneumothorax
  • Sucking chest wound
  • Air enters pleural space
  • Ventilation impaired
  • Hypoxia results
  • Signs and symptoms
  • Proportional to size of defect

13
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Open pneumothorax
  • Close chest wall defect
  • Load-and-go

14
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Flail chest

15
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Flail chest
  • Assist ventilation
  • Possible intubation
  • Load-and-go
  • Stabilize flail segment
  • Monitor for
  • Pulmonary contusion
  • Hemothorax
  • Pneumothorax

16
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Dyspnea
  • Anxiety
  • Tachypnea
  • Distended neck veins
  • Tracheal deviation (rare)
  • Breath sounds diminished
  • Hypertympany if percussed
  • Shock with hypotension

17
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Decompress affected side
  • Respiratory distress and cyanosis
  • Loss of radial pulse
  • Decreasing level of consciousness
  • Load-and-go

18
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Massive hemothorax
  • Anxiety and confusion
  • Neck veins
  • Flat hypovolemia
  • Distended mediastinal compression
  • Breath sounds decreased
  • Hypotympany if percussed
  • Shock

19
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Massive hemothorax
  • Load-and-go
  • Treat for shock
  • Fluid administration
  • Titrate to peripheral pulse (90100 mmHg)
  • Monitor for
  • Hemopneumothorax

20
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Cardiac tamponade
  • Becks triad
  • Hypotension
  • Neck veins distended
  • Heart sounds muffled
  • Paradoxical pulse
  • Breath sounds equal

21
Primary Deadly Dozen
  • Cardiac tamponade
  • Load-and-go
  • Treat for shock
  • Fluid administration
  • Titrate to peripheral pulse (90100 mmHg)
  • Monitor and treat dysrhythmias
  • Monitor for
  • Hemothorax
  • Pneumothorax

22
Secondary Deadly Dozen
  • Myocardial contusion
  • Most common cardiac injury
  • Blunt anterior chest injury
  • Same as myocardial infarction
  • Chest pain
  • Dysrhythmias
  • Cardiogenic shock (rare)
  • Treat as cardiac tamponade

23
Secondary Deadly Dozen
  • Traumatic aortic rupture
  • Most common cause of immediate death
  • Motor-vehicle collisions or falls from heights
  • 90 die immediately
  • Scene Size-up and history extremely important
  • No obvious sign of chest trauma
  • Hypertension in upper extremities and
    hypotension in lower extremities (rare)

24
Secondary Deadly Dozen
  • Tracheal or bronchial tree injury
  • Subcutaneous emphysema
  • Chest, face, neck
  • Ensure adequate airway
  • Cuffed ET tube past site of injury
  • Monitor for
  • Pneumothorax
  • Hemothorax

25
Secondary Deadly Dozen
  • Diaphragmatic tear
  • Severe blow to abdomen
  • Herniation of abdominal organs
  • More common on left
  • Breath sounds diminished
  • Bowel sounds auscultated in chest (rare)
  • Abdomen appears scaphoid

26
Secondary Deadly Dozen
  • Esophageal injury
  • Penetrating trauma
  • Difficult to assess in field
  • If unrecognized, may be lethal

27
Secondary Deadly Dozen
  • Pulmonary contusion
  • Common from blunt trauma
  • Hours to develop
  • Marked hypoxemia
  • Impaled object
  • Do not remove
  • Gently stabilize object
  • Avoid movement

28
Other Chest Injuries
  • Traumatic asphyxia
  • Severe compression
  • Ruptures capillaries
  • Cyanosis above crush
  • Swelling of head, neck
  • Swollen tongue, lips
  • Conjunctival hemorrhage

29
Other Chest Injuries
  • Simple pneumothorax
  • Fractured ribs
  • Pleuritic chest pain
  • Dyspnea
  • Decreased breath sounds
  • Hypertympany if percussed
  • Monitor for
  • Tension pneumothorax

30
Other Chest Injuries
  • Sternal fracture
  • Significant blunt trauma to anterior chest
  • Signs of fracture on palpation
  • Myocardial contusion presumed
  • Simple rib fracture
  • Most frequent chest injury
  • Monitor for
  • Pneumothorax
  • Hemothorax

31
Summary
  • Chest injuries common
  • Often life-threatening
  • Require prompt recognition
  • Require prompt intervention
  • Frequently require load-and-go
  • Airway and oxygenation always priority
  • Frequent Ongoing Exams

32
Discussion
33
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