trauma “this ain’t er” ben zarzaur, md unc department of surgery section of trauma and...

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Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

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Page 1: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Trauma“This ain’t ER”

Ben Zarzaur, MD

UNC Department of Surgery

Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Page 2: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

What is trauma?

Page 3: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 4: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Real Life & Death

Page 5: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

What is trauma?

Page 6: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Trauma Epidemiology

Page 7: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Years of Potential Life Lost

18.00%

16.40%

24.80%

40.80%

Injury

Cancer

Heart Disease

All Other Diseases

MMWRMMWR 1982;31,599. 1982;31,599.

Page 8: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Mechanisms of Injury: Blunt Trauma

• MVC

• Pedestrian vs Vehicle

• Falls

Page 9: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Mechanisms of Injury:Special Situations

• Explosions– Blunt + penetrating + burns

• Burns• Crush injuries• Drowning• Hypothermia/ exposure

Page 10: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Compression injury

• Frontal brain contusion

• Pneumothorax • Rupture of Left

hemidiaphragm • Small bowel

rupture• Chance fracture

Page 11: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Deceleration Injury

• Aortic tear– Fixed descending

aorta– Mobile arch

• Acute subdural brain hematoma

• Kidney avulsion• Splenic pedicle

Page 12: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Mechanisms of Injury: Penetrating Trauma

• Gun shot wounds• Stab wounds• Impalement

Page 13: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Gun Shot Wounds: Mechanism• Energy transfer

– Shape/size of bullet– Distance to target

• Velocity (most important)– Kinetic energy = (Mass × Velocity2 )/2

• Surface area distributed– Tumble and yaw– Fragmentation

• Anatomy– Viscoelasticity

• Muscle• organs

Page 14: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Stab wounds• Mechanism

– Blunt: Crush injury – Sharp:Tissue disruption

• Extent of Injury– Weapon size, length,

sharpness, penetration

• Severe injury– Chest and abdomen– 4+ wounds

Page 15: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 16: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

What happens when the

patient comes to a Level I

Trauma Center?

Page 17: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Trauma Team“Doin it 24/7”

• ED Physicians• Anesthesiology• Surgeons

– General and Trauma and Critical Care– Neurosurgery– Orthopedics

• Medical Students• Nurses• Radiology Techs• Radiologists

Page 18: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 19: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

What happens when this patient comes to the ER where you are

moonlighting?

Page 20: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 21: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

What the heck do I do now?

Page 22: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Don’t panic!

Page 23: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Trauma is not rocket science!

Page 24: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

• Air goes in & out

• Oxygen is good

• Blood goes round & round

• Stop bleeding

• Put things back where and how they belong

Page 25: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Prerequisites

• Wide-angled view

• Pattern recognition skills

• Ability to triage and set priorities

• Organized structure

Page 26: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Trauma is not rocket science!

Page 27: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

ABCDEF

Page 28: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Primary Survey

• A = Airway• B = Breathing • C = Circulation• D = Disability• E = Exposure• F = Fracture

Page 29: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

• Clear & establish a good airway– Consider intubation

for coma, shock, and thoracic injuries

• C-spine stabilization

Initial Assessment: Airway

Page 30: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 31: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Airway: Cricothyrotomy

Page 32: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Breathing

• Chest excursion & breath sounds– Flail chest

• Pneumothorax– Open – Tension

• Massive Hemothorax

Page 33: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 34: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 35: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Circulation• Perfusion (mental status, skin, pulse)• Control bleeding with pressure• Pericardial Tamponade

– Beck’s Triad

• Establish 2 large bore (16G or larger) IV’s in upper extremity peripheral veins

• Resuscitate with Lactated Ringers– After 4 L think about resuscitation with

blood

Page 36: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Disability

• Neurologic status– Glasgow Coma Scale

• Eye• Motor-best predictor of long term

outcome• Verbal

– Spinal Cord Injury

Page 37: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Exposure

• Remove clothes

• Temperature– warm blankets

• Finger and tube in every orifice

• Maintain full spine precautions– Log Roll

Page 38: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Initial Assessment: Fracture• Stabilize Fractures

• Relocate dislocated joints

• Reassess pulses

Page 39: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Secondary Survey• Patient history• Head to toe physical exam• Radiography

– Lateral C-spine, C-xray, pelvis– One cavity above/below entrance/exit wounds– FAST

• Urinary bladder drainage• NGT• Blood sampling/monitoring

Page 40: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Does this patient need to go to the

OR ?

Page 41: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 42: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Penetrating Abdominal Trauma

GSW KSW

OR HD Unstable HD Stable/No peritonitis

OR Peritoneal Penetration

Positive Negative

OR Observation

Penetrating Abdominal Trauma

Page 43: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Blunt Trauma

Peritonitis Indeterminate

OR HD Stable HD Unstable

CT FAST/DPL

Positive Negative

OR Keep Looking

Blunt Abdominal Injuries

Page 44: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Liver Injury

Page 45: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Liver Injury

• blunt or penetrating injury • mortality: 10 - 20% • may be associated with right lower rib

fracture• Signs / Symptoms

– RUQ pain abdominal wall spasm ,guarding hypoactive or absent BS signs of hemorrhage

Page 46: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 47: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Liver Injury: ManagementBlunt Injury

• ICU monitoring– For more severe injuries– Serial HCT

• Floor Monitoring– Less severe injuries– Serial HCT

• OR if patient becomes unstable or requires excessive blood transfusions

Page 48: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Surgical Management

Page 49: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Surgical Management

Page 50: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Surgical Management

Page 51: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Spleen Injury

Page 52: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Splenic Injury

• Blunt or Penetrating • Signs / Symptoms

– LUQ pain – Kehr’s sign– involuntary guarding hypoactive or absent BS– signs of hemorrhage– point tenderness

Page 53: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 54: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Splenic Injury Management

• ICU monitoring– Serial Physical exams– Serial HCT

• Floor Monitoring– Not indicated at this time

• Further intervention needed if patient becomes unstable or requires blood transfusion– Embolization vs Splenectomy

Page 55: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 56: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 57: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 58: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 59: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 60: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 61: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Splenectomy

• Complications– postsplenectomy infection

• Vaccination

– wound infection – subdiaphragmatic abscess – pulmonary complications– hypovolemic shock

Page 62: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Stomach and Small Bowel Injury

• Stomach & Small Bowel – Blunt vs penetrating

• Diagnosis – Pneumoperitoneum or free fluid on CT scan– small bowel injury may be difficult to detect– Found at laparotomy

• Management– Primary repair or resection

Page 63: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Colon and Rectal Injury• Colon

– Diagnosis • Pneumoperitoneum or free fluid on CT scan• injury may be difficult to detect• Found at laparotomy

– Management• Colostomy vs primary repair

• Rectum– Intraperitoneal- treat as colon injury– Extraperitoneal- primary repair with diversion

• +/- presacral drains

Page 64: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Pancreas & Duodenum

• Diagnosis – often delayed diagnosis – frequently seen together – most often contused due to blunt injury– Seen on CT Scan or at laparotomy– intramural hematoma in wall of duodenum

obstruction bilious vomiting severe abdominal pain distention

Page 65: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 66: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Pancreas Injury• Management

– if the result of blunt trauma• nonoperative management NG/OG decompression

serial physical exams monitoring signs of infection controversial - 3 weeks of bowel rest with TPN

– Complications of nonoperative care• pancreatic fistula pseudocyst formation

– Operative management is necessary if: pain fever ileus elevated serum amylase

Page 67: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Duodenal Injury• Management

– For hematoma• NG/OG decompression serial physical

exams monitoring signs of infection– controversial - 3 weeks of bowel rest with TPN

– For perforation• Primary repair with duodenal exclusion• Efferent/Afferent Duodenal tubes

Page 68: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Pelvic Injury

• Introduction– significant blood loss if bilateral

– may settle in retroperitoneal space

– 3% of all fractures

– mortality 8 - 50%

– 2nd most common cause of traumatic death

Page 69: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care
Page 70: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Pelvic Fracture

• Signs & Symptoms – pelvic instability – pain (suprapubic also) – crepitus – bloody meatus – neurovascular deficits

Page 71: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care

Pelvis

• Interventions– Stable patient

• analgesia • Repair vs mobilization

– Unstable patient• Immobilize• Ex-fix• Angiography

– embolization

Page 72: Trauma “This ain’t ER” Ben Zarzaur, MD UNC Department of Surgery Section of Trauma and Critical Care