7 Military Medicine, part 2 Flashcards
reference: Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine 9th edition
the Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) mainstays of circulation management are
the appropriate use of low-volume resuscitation (also known as permissive hypotension or hypotensive resuscitation) and the preferred resuscitation fluids
the first step in circulation management
vascular access
Vascular access is the lifeline for severe combat casualties.
It is critical to firmly secure the catheter in the combat setting.
Use a clear adhesive bandage first; then wrap enough tape to ensure that the catheter will hold in place if you were to throw the IV bag.
Ideal site for IO access in the tactical field care
sternum
“Nearly universal use of body armor in the modern tactical environment protects the sternum, so this site is ideal for IO access”
Principles of permissive hypotension
The goal is to preserve survival of casualties by maintaining a delicate balance between a blood pressure high enough to provide adequate tissue perfusion but low enough to avoid clot “blow-out” and clotting factor dilution
Current recommendations are to maintain MAP of 60 mm Hg or SBP of approx 80-90 mm Hg
The exception is the multiple trauma casualty with head injury; maintaining a SBP between 90 and 95 mmHg to preserve cerebral blood flow
A BP of 80-90 mm Hg is clinically noted by:
a normal level of consciousness and a weakly palpable radial pulse
the current resuscitation fluid recommnedations for severe hypovolemic shock [in the tactical field care]
1st choice: fresh whole blood
2nd choice: blood components in 1:1:1 ratio
lactated ringer’s solution is actually 7th choice
TCCC primary resuscitation fluid of choice
fresh whole blood
because it has all the required blood components in their natural state and provides a survival advantage to casualties with severe trauma and shock.
Using operationally secure identification cards, each prescreened individual can act as a walking blood donor once every
56 days
how to give 1:1:1 blood products?
“a unit of plasma is given first, followed by the PRBCs, and then platelets”
1 liter of infused lactated Ringer’s results in only _____ of intravascular volume expansion
200 to 250 mL
remarks on normal saline
Normal saline is NOT recommended for resuscitation due to the hyperchloremic acidosis it produces.
Additionally, aggressive resuscitation with saline-based resuscitation strategies is associated with a number of adverse effects, including increased bleeding, ARDS, multiorgan failure, ACS, and increased mortality
first-line in adjunct therapy in the Joint Trauma System Neurosurgery and Severe Head Injury Clinical Practice Guidline
Hypertonic saline 3%
*Additional options include mannitol or 23.4% saline.
When commercial hypertonic saline is not available, providers can:
add 50 mL of 23.4% saline to 500 mL of 0.9% saline to achieve a 2.98% saline solution to simplify dosing options
Under TCCC, we prevent hypothermia by
wrapping the patient in a multilayer insulating wrap with a vapor barrier liner
Management of head injury
- patient reclination with head elevated at 30 degrees
- Give oxygen to maintain O2 Sat 90%
- Maintain SBP ≥90 mm Hg
- Adjuncts (HTS, mannitol)
- Minimize interventions that may cause constriction of venous return in then neck (e.g., cervical collars and endotracheal tube tie systems)