Prehospital Trauma Life Support: Managing The Multi-System Trauma Patient

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Prehospital Trauma Life Support

Part

Managing the Multi-System Trauma Patient

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Thoracic trauma deaths occur because of...


Inadequate ventilation

Inadequate circulation
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Pathophysiology
Changes in chest wall motion.
Changes in lung expansion.

Changes in diffusion.
Changes in circulation.
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Rib Fractures
Single isolated rib fractures.
Multiple fractures may produce flail chest.

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PHTLS Refresher Course

Closed Pneumothorax

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Closed Pneumothorax
Parietal pleura Air in pleural space Partially collapsed lung Heart

Visceral pleura

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Pericardial Tamponade
Pathophysiology

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Thoracic Trauma
Management

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Abdominal Trauma
Pathophysiology Key indicator

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Suspect Intra-abdominal Bleeding


When signs of shock are NOT explained by other serious injuries.

Head injury.

Thoracic injury.
External hemorrhage.

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PHTLS Refresher Course

On-Scene Management

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PHTLS Refresher Course

En-Route Management

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PHTLS Refresher Course

Head Trauma Pathophysiology

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Head Trauma
Skull fractures.

Depressed. Linear.

Basilar fractures.

CSF from ears, nose. Bleeding from ears. Raccoon eyes. Battles sign.
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PHTLS Refresher Course

Concussion & Contusion

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PHTLS Refresher Course

Intracranial Hemorrhage

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Subdural Hematomas
Acute Subacute Chronic

Dura mater

Subdural hematoma R-46

Suspect possible subdural hematoma.

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Head Trauma Physiology


Cerebral perfusion.
Mean arterial pressure.

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CO2 Potential Vasodilator


Increased intracranial pressure.

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CO2 Potent Vasodilator


Hyperventilation Hyperoxygenation

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PHTLS Refresher Course

Spine & Musculoskeletal Trauma Pathophysiology

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Spine trauma...
A lack of neurological deficit does not rule out an unstable spine.

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Spine Trauma
Signs Symptoms

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Spine Trauma Summary


Method

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Musculoskeletal Trauma
Priorities of care. Missed injuries.

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All musculoskeletal injuries must be treated as fractures by EMTs.

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Musculoskeletal Trauma Special Considerations


Concealed internal bleeding.

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PHTLS Refresher Course

Thermal Injuries

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Burn Trauma
Immediate measures to save lives.

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First treat other trauma, then treat the burn!


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Burn Trauma
Smoke inhalation.

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Chemical Burns
Management. Remove the agent.

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Electrical Burns
Cause of death. Other damage.

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Burn Trauma Summary

Primary considerations.

Management of thermal burns.

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Key Considerations
Recognize critical needs of the patient.

Efficiency of care.
Aggressive intervention.

Rapid packaging.
Rapid transport.

Continue treatment.
Nearest appropriate hospital.
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