ATLS Flashcards
What must be asked in ems handover?
Mist Mechanism and time injury Injuries found and suspected Symptoms and signs Treatment initiated
Name 6 immediately life threatening injuries in trauma (“lethal” 6)
Atomic • Airway obstruction or disruption • tension pneumothorax • open pneumothorax • massive haemothorax • intercostal disruption: flail chest • cardiac tamponade
Name the hidden 6 thoracic traumas that are potentially life threatening
1 tracheobronchial disruption 2.0esophageal disruption 3. Thoracic aortic disruption 4- pulmonary contusion 5. Myocardial contusion 6. Traumatic diaphragm tear Assess in secondary survey
What is the lethal triad?
- Acidosis
- coagulopathy
- hypothermia
What is occult shock?
Persistent metabolic acidosis with near - normal/ normal vitals
Normal urinary output?
> 0,5 ml /kg/h
How do secondary survey?
• history:
Sample- signs and symptoms, allergies, medication, past pertinent history, last oral intake, events leading to injury
DEATH
Injury patterns
• Clin exam head to toe including log roll
• adjuncts inducing e fast, xray etc
Name the sequence of the 8 steps of managing a p1 trauma patient
- Preparation:prehospital and hospital phase, mist
- Triage
- Primary survey abcde and resuscitation
- Adjuncts to primary survey
- Secondary survey: head to toe, history
- Adjuncts to secondary survey
- Reevaluation - end points resuscitation, repeat examination, vitals etc
- Definitive care including transport
How is ems handover done?
MIST Mechanism and time of injury Injuries found and suspected Symptoms and signs Treatment initiated
Name the 6 P’s of a major incident response
- preparation
- Planning
- Pre-hospital
- Procedures for hospital management
- Patterns of Injury
- Pitfalls
When a major incident is declared, what report should ems give as part of pre-hospital response?
Methane Major incident declared! Exact location Type incident Hazards Access-routes safe to use Number, type, severity of casualties Emergency services present and required
Name the 3 procedures for hospital management when major incident has been declared
- Reception phase
- Definitive care
- Recovery phase
Define surge capacity
Expansion of space and resources beyond normal to handle mass casualties. Expressed as number of additional critically injured casualties per hour that can be managed
Define surge capability
Mobilizing key personnel to take care of the complicated problems that will arise. Capability to manage injuries and medical problems with which patients are afflicted eg burns, Paeds, critical care, elderly with comorbids, physical trauma, psycho-emotional issues, chemical and radiological exposure.
Which principles should be followed in each stage of major incidents management?
Ccscattt Command Control Safety Communication Assessment Triage Treatment Transport