Trauma Evaluation Priorities PDF
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This document covers trauma evaluation priorities in medical settings. It details essential elements such as initial assessments, injury types, and soft tissue importance. The information should prove valuable to medical professionals.
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# Trauma Evaluation Priorities - Saving life - Major abdominal and head injuries - Pelvic fractures - unable to see the bleeding - Saving extremity - Vascular injury - Open fracture - Joint dislocation and fracture reduction - Initial Assessment - Assessment and resuscitation - Trau...
# Trauma Evaluation Priorities - Saving life - Major abdominal and head injuries - Pelvic fractures - unable to see the bleeding - Saving extremity - Vascular injury - Open fracture - Joint dislocation and fracture reduction - Initial Assessment - Assessment and resuscitation - Trauma ABCDE: Airway, Breathing, Circulation Disability, Exposure ## Tissues Damaged in Fracture - Bone, periosteum, muscle, subcutaneous fat tissue, skin ### Importance of Soft Tissue - Skin: Primary barrier against infection - Muscle: Helps circulation - Periosteum: Bone blood supply (outer 1/3), osteoprogenitor cell source ### Bone Blood Supply - Feeding artery, metaphyseal-epiphyseal artery system, periosteal artery system. ## Fracture - Bone integrity impaired, soft tissue injury - **Diagnosis:** Plain radiograph - In two planes at 90 degrees to each other - One upper one lower joint should be visible ## Fracture Types - Normal - Transverse - Oblique - Spiral - Avulsion - Impacted - Fissure - Greenstick ## Fracture Findings - Pain and tenderness - Deformity - Swelling and ecchymosis - Limited ROM - Pathological movement ## Open Fracture - Fracture hematoma is soft tissue injury communicating with external environment without skin barrier. - ~3% in extremities (femur, humerus.) - Rapid wound assessment, removal of gross contamination, sterile, moist, loose dressing for single use - **Antibiotic Treatment:** - For gram (+) Cephalosporins - For gram (-) If type 3 injury aminoglycosides - If contaminated w/ fecal or soil add penicillin - **Tetanus Prophylaxis:** - Tetanus toxoid - < 5 years: No vaccination needed - > 5 years: Vaccination booster - None vaccinate T16 ## Gustillo and Anderson Classification - **Type 1:** <1cm - **Type 2:** 1-10cm - **Type 3:** - **A:** Dirty, segmental, adequate soft tissue coverage - **B:** Very dirty, periosteum, inadequate soft tissue coverage - **C:** Vascular injury requiring repair - **Type 3C:** 50% Probability of amputation ## Primary Surgery Fracture Fixations - **Plates:** Usually for upper extremity, metaphyseal fractures - **IM nails:** With or without reaming, type 3B usage - **EF:** Most common, temp/permanent ## Secondary Surgery Soft Tissue - As soon as possible (7 days) - Type 1 , 2, 3A: Primary closure - Type 3B: Soft tissue transfer for bone closure ## Secondary Surgery Bone Tissue - Internal fixation transition (14 days) - Closure of defects - < 6cm: Grafting (8-12 weeks) - >6cm: Bone transport/vascularized bone grafting - Delayed union/non union - Osteomyelitis ## Healing Phases ### 1. Inflammation Phase 1-4 days - Fragments w/o soft tissue connection become devascularized - **Vasodilation:** IL-1, BMP, TGFB - Macrophages (mainly), neutrophils, stem cells, cytokines - Osteoclasts begin clearing necrotic bone fragments - Coagulation - Fibrin fibers stabilize hematoma (hematoma callus) ### 2. Repair Phase 2-40 days - Primary callus response - Angiogenesis - Fibroblasts produce collagen fibers - Collagen loosely bind fracture fragments - Endochondral ossification - Bone formation - Soft callus turn to hard callus ### 3. Remodeling Phase 25 -100 days - Begins in the middle of repair - Can last years - Bone to regain normal shape - Ends w/ formation of medullary cavity ## Factors Affecting Fracture Healing - Age - Chronic diseases - Vascular damages - Smoking - Nerve function - Degree of bone loss - Sterility (open fracture) - Corticosteroids inhibit bone formation ## Rotator Cuff Tears - Tendon/muscle rupture - Deep bruises - hematoma formation ## Soft Tissue Injuries - **1st Degree/Grade:** Mild injury - Microscopic structural damage - Slight local tenderness - **2nd Degree/Grade:** Moderate injury - Partial rupture of issue - Visible swelling, tenderness - Joint stability not affected - **3rd Degree/Grade:** Severe injury - Complete rupture of tissue - Significant swelling - Significant instability ## Ligament Injuries - Bruising, swelling, tenderness - Pain on movement/loading, palpation - Instability depending on severity - MRI scan for conformation ## Strains - **1st Degree:** - Minimal strength and movement loss - Pain on active movement/passive stretching - In athletes can be distressing as more severe injury - **2nd and 3rd Degree:** - Significant function loss - Pain aggravated by any attempt - May be palpable - In 3rd, muscle may bunch up resembling a tumor - **Diagnosis:** - Pain felt at moment of injury - Pain w/ rest, ↑ by attempted contraction - Palpable defects when superficial - Tenderness, swelling - Bruising after 24hr w/ spasm ## Contusions - Ezilme - Muscle is pressed against bone - Caused by direct blow on muscle - Muscle tears, heavy bleeding - muscular hematoma ## Intramuscular Hematoma - Bleeding within fascia covering muscle - Intramuscular pressure: Counteract further bleeding - Swelling lasts >48hr, tenderness, pain, mobility - Swelling increase due to osmosis ## Intermuscular Hematoma - Damage includes fascia & adj. blood vessels - Bleeding occuring between muscles - No pressure buildup - Bruising and swelling appear distally to damage within 24-48h - Muscle function returns - Prognosis better than intramuscular ## Treatment: PRICE - Protection, Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation ### Cubitus Valgus - Forearm angled laterally ### Cubitus Varus - Forearm angled medially ### Genu Varum - Bowed legs ### Genu Valgum - Knocked knees | Grade | Description | |---|---| | 0 | No movement or flickering of contraction | | 1 | Movement with gravity eliminated | | 2 | Movement against gravity | | 3 | Movement against resistance | | 4 | Normal power or ROM | ## b: Exaggerated lordosis ## c: Rounded kyphosis ## d: Knuckle kyphosis with gibbus