A and E Flashcards
Outline ABCDE approach
A - secure airway - guedel, NP airway, ET tube, LMA
B - RR - Oxygen, nebulised salbutamol/ipratropium bromide
C - BP, HR, CRT, UO - Fluid resus, vasopressors, catheterisation
D - GCS, AVPU, cappilary glucose - CT, IV dex
E - rash, burns, trauma…etc.
What is Canadian C-spine rule? What is it used for? When is it applicable?
Decision rule use to rule out C-spine injury
Used to decide if need CT scanning post neck injury
Applicable if pt is alert (GCS 15) + stable following trauma
Define 4 types of burn Burn
Define Scald
Burn - injury by chemical, thermal, electrical or radiation energy
Scald - contact with hot liquid or steam
Where to look/be careful of in burns
Nostrils - inhalation injury
How to measure skin area of burns in adults?
Difference in children?
Rule of 9's: Head - 9% Arm - 9% Leg - 18% Torso (front) - 18% Torso (back) - 18%
Hand ~ 1%
CHILDREN: - Lund + Browder chart 1 year old: - Head 18% - Leg 14% (For each +1yr = -1%head & +0.5%leg)
Which layer of burn?
Pain, red, glistening, NO blisters, brisk capillary refill.
Heal in one week
No scarring
Superficial partial thickness
Which layer of burn?
Pale pink/mottled, swelling, SMALL blisters +/- weeping, brisk capillary refill, reduced sensation
How long to heal?
Minimal scarring
Superficial dermal
Heal 3 weeks
Which layer of burn?
Cherry red, blistering, dry, blotchy, no blanching, no cap refill, reduced sensation
How long to heal?
Scarring +/- surgical treatment
Deep dermal
3-8 weeks healing
Which layer of burn?
White/black, dry, no blisters, no cap refill, no sensation
Treatment?
Full-thickness (3rd degree)
Damage through all layers of skin (epidermis, dermis, hypodermis)
Requires surgical repair/graft
Which layer of burn?
Includes subcut fat, muscle + bone
Reconstruction/amputation needed
4th degree
Investigations for burns?
Bloods - FBC, crossmatch, carboxyhaemoglobin, glucose, U+E, ABG
CXR
Cardiac monitoring - dysrhythmia for hypoxia + electrolyte distubances
- Circulation
- BP may be difficult + unreliable
- Monitor urine hourly –> CATHETER
First aid + treatment of minor burn
- stop burning + cool
- Remove clothing
- Brush chemical powders away
- Run under cold tap - 20MINS!
- remove constricting clothing + cover w/ clean+dry linens - for hypothermia - Dress + Analgesia
- Clean w/ soap+water
- Leave blisters <1cm intact (reduce infection) + aspirate large ones
- Non-adhesive gauze dressing
- Give analgesia + check tetanus prophylaxis
…If infection - daily wound inspection + dressing change + 7 days fluclox
3 key worries with a major burn?
Direct thermal injury –> airway oedema/obstruction
Carbon monoxide poisoning
Inhalation of smoke –> pneumonia+oedema - CHECK NOSTRILS!
Tx of Major burn??
ABCDE
A
- ET tube + ventilation
- ?Inhalation injury - hoarseness, singed nostril hairs, face/neck burns
B
- 100% O2 + COHb levels
- ABG (PaO2 not good with CO poisoning)
- elevate head - 25o = reduce oedema
N.B. Fluid loss:
Heat –> ^ cap perm, oedema + visible fluid loss + blisters
C
- IV fluid resus (within 24hr of injury) if: 15%adult/10%child burn s.a.
- children=also maintenance
E - Strong opioids + prevent hypothermia
3 burns complications
Fluid loss, infection, scarring