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Objectives - At the end of this session, you will be able to:. Perform a rapid initial assessment of a trauma patient (primary survey)Focus on those issues necessary for immediate managementTriage care appropriatelyReorder the
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1. Trauma Primary and Secondary Survey with Adjuncts Corey R. Heitz MD
2. Objectives - At the end of this session, you will be able to: Perform a rapid initial assessment of a trauma patient (primary survey)
Focus on those issues necessary for immediate management
Triage care appropriately
Reorder the “ABCDE” method as indicated
Use adjunctive studies to assist in triage and initial management
Once stabilized, perform a rapid secondary assessment
Perform a head-to-toe survey with attention to life-threatening injury
Maintain patient safety during this assessment
Order appropriate imaging studies
Perform a tertiary survey in the trauma patient prior to disposition
3. Future plans... Fellowship trained trauma surgeon
General surgeon covering trauma service
EM physician at a community hospital (no trauma service)
EM physician at a Level I Trauma Center
4. Your future trauma role Rapid assessment
Rapid stabilization
Triage decisions
transfer?
workup?
5. The Primary Survey
6. Importance of an Organized Primary Survey Rapid identification of reversible, life-threatening issues
Airway control
Oxygenation status
Hemorrhage control
“Hidden” injuries
Triage to appropriate treatment
Tube thoracostomy for intrathoracic hemorrhage
immediate transfer to a trauma center
OR for unstable intraabdominal injuries
Avoids diversion of attention to less urgent matters
Signs of basilar skull fracture in a hypotensive multi-trauma patient
Lack of pulses in a GSW to the head
7. The Primary Survey - ABCDE Airway
Evaluate for patency, obstruction, injury
Blood, crepitus, deviation, stridor
“What’s your name?”
Evaluate for need for protection
Breathing
Symmetry of chest wall motion and lung sounds, respiratory distress
Hypoxia, cyanosis
8. The Primary Survey - ABCDE Circulation
Peripheral and central pulses
Blood pressure
Massive hemorrhage
mental status
Disability
Ability to move fingers, toes
Mental status (likely evaluated earlier)
Exposure
Visualize all areas of potential injury
Penetrating trauma:
Include axilla, perineum
9. A 30 year old patient with a self-inflicted arm laceration (slight bleeding) arrives moaning and lethargic (GCS 7) with BP 63/34, HR 145, SpO2 94% on RA. What is your initial course of action? Intubate due to GCS <8
BVM due to lethargy
FAST exam
Rapid fluid resuscitation
10. The Primary Survey - Management Identify and treat immediate life-threats
may include intubation, chest decompression, fluid resuscitation
order of care is determined by underlying problem, expected course
hemorrhagic shock: fluids
airway control may be needed prior to transport, further care
11. A 23 year old female GSW to the head arrives by EMS. during tranport: HR 113, BP 80/60, SpO2 88% RA. What is your order of evaluation upon moving her to the ED bed? airway patency, breathing effectiveness, circulatory status including massive hemorrhage, ability to move extremities, identification of other wounds
ID of other wounds (including FAST) concurrent with eval of airway patency, breathing effectiveness, circulatory status including massive hemorrhage
Airway patency, breathing effectiveness, signs of basilar skull fracture, FAST exam, circulatory status including massive hemorrhage
12. Primary Survey - Order of Events Assess ABCs fully (patency, breathing, circulatory status)
the apneic, pulseless patient needs to be identified immediately
conditions can change rapidly
Manage in order of importance to the patient’s condition
For example
13. 34 year old MVA presents moaning and breathing with bleeding RUE amputation. BP 85/43 HR 135 SpO2 98%. In what order do you manage the patient? Intubation (GCs <8), eval tube placement and respiratory status, IVs with fluid resuscitation, secondary survey (look at arm)
IVs with fluid resuscitation, consider intubation, further evaluate respiratory status, evaluate arm wound
Evaluate arm wound and tourniquet to tamponade bleeding, place IVs and start fluid resuscitation, consider intubation, further assess respiratory status
14. Primary Survey - Order of Events Assess ABCs fully
Manage in order of importance
life-threatening hemorrhage (C) may come first
especially if Airway appears patent and respiratory status (B) appears intact
15. 43 year old male with stab wound to the right upper chest presents hypoxic, tachypneic, hypotensive. What’s your first course of action? Intubate, reevaluation for response
Fluid resuscitation, reevaluation for response
Needle thoracostomy
Tube thoracostomy
16. Primary Survey - Order of Events Signs of tension pneumothorax
hypotension, hypoxia, diminished breath sounds, distended neck veins, tracheal deviation
Treatment is decompression (B)
Intubation (A) will be harmful
positive pressure ventilation results in increased intrathoracic pressure
This person’s hypotension may not be due to hemorrhage (C)
fluid resuscitation will occur, but is not the most important step
19. What’s not performed concurrently? Secondary survey
Must complete primary survey prior to moving to secondary survey
20. 35 year old MVA presents with BP 89/56, HR 134, SpO2 94% NRB. He cannot move his hands or LEs and has a reported hemostatic (dressed) open fracture to the RLE. His airway is patent and he is breathing, although his breath sounds may be diminished on the left.Two large bore IVs are in place. What is your order of action? Initiate fluids, perform c-spine lateral films and attempt c-spine clearance, FAST exam
Initiate fluids, maintain in-line cervical spine protection, FAST exam, CXR and pelvis X-rays
Initiate fluids, maintain spinal protection, CXR, pelvis, and RLE xrays, FAST exam
Logroll patient to look for spinal stepoffs, look in ears for signs of skull fracture, undress RLE wound, transport for CT of head/neck/chest/abdomen/pelvis/RLE/toes
21. Primary Survey - Adjuncts Use adjuncts to help triage the patient’s management
Options
FAST exam
CXR, pelvis xrays
EKG
22. Primary Survey - Not Adjuncts CT scans of any sort
Cervical spine plain films
Extremity films
23. 35 year old MVA presents with BP 89/56, HR 134, SpO2 94% NRB. He cannot move his hands or LEs and has a previously bleeding reported hemostatic (dressed) open fracture to the RLE. His airway is patent and he is breathing, although his breath sounds may be diminished on the left.Two large bore IVs are in place. FAST exam shows is shown below. What do you do now? Fluid resuscitation, transport to CT
Fluid resuscitation, CXR, pelvis and RLE xrays while reassessing for response to fluids
Fluid resuscitation, chest and pelvis xrays, immediate transport to OR
Fluid resuscitation, CXR, pelvis, RLE xrays followed by CT head, C-spine, etc
24. 35 year old MVA presents with BP 89/56, HR 134, SpO2 94% NRB. He cannot move his hands or LEs and has a previously bleeding, now reported hemostatic (dressed) open fracture to the RLE. His airway is patent and he is breathing, although his breath sounds may be diminished on the left.Two large bore IVs are in place. FAST exam shows is shown below. What do you do now?
25. Primary Survey - Adjuncts Used in triage decisions
unstable patients do not go to the CT scanner
use FAST exam, CXR, pelvis xray to determine how to proceed
positive FAST: OR
negative FAST: look at chest, pelvis
manage appropriately (chest tube, OR for packing/IR for embolization, fluids and pressors for probable spinal injury)
28. Awake and yelling 18 year old male, GSW to the right upper arm and RLE. BP 123/76, HR 115, SpO2 97%. IV access has been established. What’s your initial evaluation? Disrobe patient, check axilla, perineum, back, chest, buttocks for more wounds
RLE, RUE xrays to look for bony injury, bullet fragments
FAST exam
check blood pressures in both arms
29. A 35 year old male presents after an MVA with multiple injuries. He arrested 4 min prior to arrival and has not been intubated. What’s your course of action? Intubate, bilateral needle decompression, large bore IVs/Cordis with volume resuscitation while performing CPR
Thoracotomy: cross clamp aorta
FAST exam to look for cardiac function; if absent, cease efforts
Intubate, bilateral tube thoracostomies (with or without tube placement), large bore IVs/Cordis with fluid resuscitation
30. Blunt Trauma Arrest My training:
manage immediate, treatable life-threats, reassess
airway: intubate
breathing: bilateral thoracostomies (not needles)
circulation: immediate volume resuscitation
while awaiting response, FAST (esp. looking at pericardium)
then decide if you’re done
31. The case for immediate cardiac US Blaivas M, Fox JC. Outcome in cardiac arrest patients found to have cardiac standstill on the bedside emergency department echocardiogram. Acad Emerg Med. 2001;8:616-621.
not trauma patients
169 patients, 136 w/ cardiac standstill
20 survived to leave the ED
none with cardiac standstill (regardless of electrical activity)
convenience sample
mean age 72 in standstill, 68 in those w/ activity (71 overall, range 32-97)
32. The case for immediate cardiac US Schuster KM, Lofthouse R, Moore C, Lui F, Kaplan LJ, Davis KA. Pulseless electrical activity, focused abdominal sonography for trauma, and cardiac contractile activity as predictors of survival after trauma. J Trauma. 2009;67:1154-1157.
retrospective, included all traumas w/o pulse or BP
28 patients, average age 49
12/28 had contractile activity, 5 survived ED
0 of those w/o conractile activity survived
longer resusc time in those with contractile activity (10 vs 5 min)
33. Final Thoughts on Blunt Arrest There may be a role for US to evaluate for cardiac activity
I still favor rapidly attempting resuscitation
intubate
bilateral thoracostomies
volume resuscitation
US at this point?
34. Primary Survey - Summary Manage obvious life-threats before potential life-threats
Stop the bleeding
Airway management may be indicated for AMS, but not necessarily immediately
Obtain complete vital signs, IV access - until then, the primary survey is not complete
Use bedside tests only: US and chest, pelvis films to triage, direct management
C-spine and extremity films are not included in the primary survey
Unstable patients do not go to the donut of death
Get em nekked! (check for missed/hidden wounds)
36. Secondary Survey Occurs only after primary survey and initial resuscitation
Goal is identification of other important injuries or risk for those injuries
Thorough evaluation, along with H/P
37. Secondary Survey - History Allergies
Medications
Past medical history
Last meal
Events
Where do you hurt?
What do you remember?
What happened prior to the accident?
Drinking or drug use?
LMP
38. Secondary - History Goal is to determine not only potential sites of injury but also medical issues
chest pain prior to the accident?
LOC before accident?
meds or drugs taken today?
39. Secondary Survey - Physical Exam head to toe survey
must know what you are looking for
includes logroll, palpation of spine
potential for spinal clearance at this time
continuous reevaluation and monitoring of patient
any instability, go back to your ABCs
40. Secondary Survey - Head and Face Scalp
lacerations
cephalohematoma
skull fracture
Ears
lacerations
CSF otorrhea
blood from ear canal
blood behind TMs
Face
lacerations
numbness
stepoffs
pain
malocclusion
dental injuries
nasal injuries (septal hematoma)
eyes
41. Secondary Survey - Eyes
42. Secondary Survey - Eyes
43. Assault with injuries only to the head, stable vital signs. Head exam normal, some facial contusions, and you notice missing teeth. What study do you need to order?
45. Secondary Survey - Neck tracheal deviation
bruits
crepitus
swelling
lacerations
seat belt stripe
bony tenderness, stepoffs
can you clear the c-spine?
46. Secondary Survey - Neck Adjuncts assume you cannot clinically clear the cervical spine
what is your choice of imaging?
CT vs xray
NEXUS:
35 of 1500 injuries missed by adequate plain films (3 unstable injuries)
Bailitz, 2009 J Trauma
50 clinically significant missed injuries in 1500 patients
CT 100% sensitive, xray 62%
47. Secondary Survey - Chest reevaluate breath sounds
chest wall motion
crepitance
areas of tenderness
contusion
previously missed penetrating injuries
take another look at your chest xray
48. Secondary Survey - Chest Xray evaluate ribs
mediastinum
apices
small effusion (hemothorax)
50. Your MVA patient is stable with no large pneumo- or hemothorax on supine chest xray. How sensitive is that xray for pneumothorax? excellent (almost 100%)
at most 75%
at most 50%
horrible (25%)
51. Adjuncts to the secondary survey: E-FAST “extended” FAST exam (E-FAST)
thoracic ultrasound added to the FAST exam
86 to 98% sensitive, 98-100% specific (LR- 0.05)
52. E-FAST performed longitudinally, midclavicular, near the apex
looking for lung sliding, comet tails
53. E-FAST performed longitudinally, midclavicular, near the apex
looking for lung sliding, comet tails
54. Secondary Survey Adjuncts - When to CT the chest indications for CT of the chest
abnormalities on CXR
external signs of injury
how much better than CXR is CT?
Trupka 1997 J Trauma: 65% of 103 patients had new findings on CT
41% resulted in a change in management
Barrios 2009 Am Surg:
25% of 143 patients with normal CXR had findings on CT (6% change in management)
81% of 57 with abnormal CXR had CT findings (37% change in management)
55. Secondary Survey - Abdomen tenderness
distension
contusion
penetrating trauma
don’t forget perineum, rectum, vagina, urethra
56. 18 year old female assault with abdominal pain. FAST exam is negative. How sensitive is the FAST exam for intraabdominal trauma? 20%
40%
60%
80%
almost 100%
57. FAST exam for blunt abdominal trauma Miller 2003 J Trauma
372 patients with suspected blunt abdominal injury
all had FAST, followed one hour later by CT
313 true negatives, 22 false negative, 8 false positives
sensitivity 42% (PPV 67%, LR- 0.85)
19 true-negative FASTs went on to laparotomy for injuries w/o hemoperitoneum
11 patients had retroperitoneal injuries
58. Secondary Survey - Spine cervical spine we discussed
logroll for thoracolumbar spine palpation
stepoffs, tenderness
while you’re there, look at the back
lacerations, contusions, penetrating wounds missed previously
The Valley Handshake (i.e., the rectal exam)
59. Utility of a Rectal Exam in Trauma What are we looking for?
decreased tone
blood
high-riding prostrate
Esposito 2005 J Trauma
DRE vs “other clinical indicators” (OCIs)
no difference in negative and positive predictive value
OCIs much more associated with index injuries
conclusion: DRE rarely provides information that changes management
60. Extremities and Neuro pulses
sites of tenderness
contusions
deformities
lacerations
range of motion at joints
neurologic function
pelvis
3 axes
if there’s any instability, stop examining
61. You are evaluating a patient with a single gunshot to the RLE with intact pulses. What test do you want to perform to decide if he is safe for discharge? Arteriography
Arterial Duplex Ultrasonograpy
Ankle Brachial Index
Equal pulses are good enough for me
62. Role of ABIs Sadjadi J, Cureton EL, Dozier KC, Kwan RO, Victorino GP. Expedited treatment of lower extremity gunshot wounds. J Am Coll Surg. 2009;209:740-745.
retrospective, 182 patients then 90 prospective
ABI <0.9 = CT angiography, ABI >0.9 = safe for d/c
100% PPV, 98% NPV
no patient developed bleeding, ischemia, or limb loss
Mills WJ, Barei DP, McNair P. The value of the ankle-brachial index for diagnosing arterial injury after knee dislocation: a prospective study. J Trauma. 2004;56:1261-1265.
38 patients, 11 w/ ABI <0.9, 27 >0.9
all patients with abnormal had injury, no patients with normal had injuries
“gold standard” was serial exams, duplex ultrasonography
63. tertiary survey What is the tertiary survey?
final reassessment prior to disposition
your last chance to detect missed injuries
Biffl WL, Harrington DT, Cioffi WG. Implementation of a tertiary trauma survey decreases missed injuries. J Trauma. 2003;54:38-43; discussion 43-4.
2.4% missed injuries pre, 1.5% post
missed being defined as “at time of admission”
mostly musculoskeletal
some studies show up to 10% of patients have initially missed injuries
64. Summary - Secondary Survey Thorough evaluation of all areas of potential injury
If patient develops instability, return to the primary survey
Use imaging studies to define further injuries based on exam
Perform a tertiary survey on all trauma patients
especially those being discharged home
65. References Blaivas M, Fox JC. Outcome in cardiac arrest patients found to have cardiac standstill on the bedside emergency department echocardiogram. Acad Emerg Med. 2001;8:616-621.
Schuster KM, Lofthouse R, Moore C, Lui F, Kaplan LJ, Davis KA. Pulseless electrical activity, focused abdominal sonography for trauma, and cardiac contractile activity as predictors of survival after trauma. J Trauma. 2009;67:1154-1157.
Hoffman JR, Wolfson AB, Todd K, Mower WR. Selective cervical spine radiography in blunt trauma: methodology of the National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study (NEXUS). Annals of Emergency Medicine. 1998;32:461-469.
Bailitz J, Starr F, Beecroft M, et al. CT should replace three-view radiographs as the initial screening test in patients at high, moderate, and low risk for blunt cervical spine injury: a prospective comparison. J Trauma. 2009;66:1605-1609.
Wilkerson RG, Stone MB. Sensitivity of bedside ultrasound and supine anteroposterior chest radiographs for the identification of pneumothorax after blunt trauma. Academic Emergency Medicine. 2010;17:11-17.
Trupka A, Waydhas C, Hallfeldt KK, Nast-Kolb D, Pfeifer KJ, Schweiberer L. Value of thoracic computed tomography in the first assessment of severely injured patients with blunt chest trauma: results of a prospective study. J Trauma. 1997;43:405-11; discussion 411-2.
66. References Barrios C, Malinoski D, Dolich M, Lekawa M, Hoyt D, Cinat M. Utility of thoracic computed tomography after blunt trauma: when is chest radiograph enough? Am Surg. 2009;75:966-969.
Miller MT, Pasquale MD, Bromberg WJ, Wasser TE, Cox J. Not so FAST. J Trauma. 2003;54:52-9; discussion 59-60.
Esposito TJ, Ingraham A, Luchette FA, et al. Reasons to omit digital rectal exam in trauma patients: no fingers, no rectum, no useful additional information. J Trauma. 2005;59:1314-1319.
Sadjadi J, Cureton EL, Dozier KC, Kwan RO, Victorino GP. Expedited treatment of lower extremity gunshot wounds. J Am Coll Surg. 2009;209:740-745.
Mills WJ, Barei DP, McNair P. The value of the ankle-brachial index for diagnosing arterial injury after knee dislocation: a prospective study. J Trauma. 2004;56:1261-1265.
Biffl WL, Harrington DT, Cioffi WG. Implementation of a tertiary trauma survey decreases missed injuries. J Trauma. 2003;54:38-43; discussion 43-4.