Chapter 31 | Chest and Abdominal Trauma COPY Flashcards
• Understanding chest injuries and emergency care for chest injuries • Understanding abdominal injuries and emergency care for abdominal injuries
True or false:
Pericardial tamponade is usually a result of penetrating trauma.
true
True or false:
Pericardial tamponade is usually a result of blunt trauma.
false
usually a result of penetrating trauma
Answer:
How common is commotio cordis?
very uncommon
requires strike on chest to meet very specific point in heartbeat cycle
True or false:
Internal bleeding can be severe if organs or blood vessels are lacerated or ruptured.
true
True or false:
When treating a large evisceration, maintain warmth by placing layers of bulky dressing over occlusive dressing.
true
Choose:
Why is it so important to seal holes in the chest from penetrating trauma as early as possible?
A. This will keep the blood from leaking out of the wound and into the pleural cavity.
B. The heart cannot fill if there is no air in the chest.
C. The lungs may collapse if air and blood displace lung tissue.
D. A rib may have been fractured, which will decrease lung compliance.
C
Choose:
A patient with an abdominal injury will likely want to keep the legs in what position to reduce pain?
A. Bent
B. Straight
C. Crossed
D. Elevated
A
Choose:
You arrive on scene to a 34-year-old male gunshot victim lying in his living room disoriented, pale, cool, and diaphoretic, with shallow respirations. You note blood on his shirt at the chest and abdomen, and the puncture wound appears to be through the chest.
What is your first priority in treating this patient?
A. Administer high-flow oxygen via a nonrebreather mask.
B. Locate the gunshot wound on the chest, and place your gloved hand over the injury.
C. Use an emergency move to place the patient on the cot and transfer him to the ambulance.
D. Locate the gunshot wound on the chest, and retrieve an occlusive dressing from your responder bag.
B
Choose:
You are treating a patient who was stabbed in the right side of the anterior chest wall. He has shortness of breath, weakness, and rapid breathing. Aside from administering oxygen, what is the most appropriate treatment for this patient?
A. Apply an occlusive dressing on the chest wall, and tape the dressing on three sides.
B. Tape a bulky gauze dressing to the chest.
C. Bind the ribs together with wide tape.
D. Lay the patient in the prone position, to minimize chest movement.
A
True or false:
A compression injury is when a twisting effect damages the ribs.
false
compression injury is chest collapse by blunt trauma
True or false:
Blunt trauma involves various objects penetrating the chest wall.
false
blunt trauma is dull impact against body (not through surface)
True or false:
Bullet wounds are a type of penetrating trauma and involve both internal and external injuries.
true
True or false:
Any blow to the chest that fractures the ribs and sternum is a compression injury.
false
Choose:
When caring for a patient with an impaled object in the abdomen, the EMT should:
A. remove the object and seal the wound with an occlusive dressing.
B. remove the object if it slips out easily.
C. leave the impaled object in place and stabilize it with bulky dressings.
D. quickly remove the impaled object and apply direct pressure to the wound.
C
Fill in the blank:
You [SHOULD/SHOULDN’T] treat an evisceration with a dry, sterile bandage.
You should not treat an evisceration with a dry, sterile bandage.
intestines must stay wet and hydrated
Choose:
Pneumothorax may occur when:
A. a fractured rib breaks through the skin of the outer chest and keeps the wound sealed with the bone end.
B. a hemothorax caused by a penetrating wound to the chest is left untreated for an extended period.
C. a sucking chest wound is sealed with an occlusive dressing that is taped on only three sides.
D. air leaks into the chest cavity from a damaged lung with no opening through the outer chest.
D
Pneumothorax occurs when air accumulates in the potential space in the area where the lung tissue adheres to the chest wall. When air accumulates in this space, it pushes lung tissue away from the chest wall, causing collapse of the lung. Air can enter this space through an external wound or through escape from a punctured lung. Occasionally both events may occur.
Choose:
Your patient has received a blunt trauma injury to the chest from being hit with a baseball bat. You notice a flail segment, lung sounds are diminished, and the patient is having difficulty breathing. You note that the patient’s trachea is deviating toward the uninjured side.
You suspect:
A. a pneumothorax.
B. a hemothorax.
C. an open wound that you cannot see.
D. a tension pneumothorax.
D
A tension pneumothorax occurs when air accumulates in the pleural cavity until the lung collapses, and the pressure buildup will eventually start to shift the intrathoracic contents toward the contralateral side of the injury. This injury can happen with either blunt or penetrating trauma.
Choose:
You are treating a patient who was diagnosed with multiple rib fractures following a motor vehicle collision. You note equal chest rise and fall. He appears short of breath as well as pale, cool, and diaphoretic.
Given the patient’s presentation as well as his acute medical history, what condition is he most likely to suffer?
A. Flail chest
B. Hemothorax
C. Tension pneumothorax
D. Pneumothorax
B
hemothorax can be caused when lacerations within the chest cavity are produced by penetrating objects or fractured ribs
blood will flow into the space around the lung (causing lung to collapse)
patient will experience a loss of blood (leading to shock)
Choose:
Emergency care of a patient with an open chest wound should include:
A. applying an occlusive dressing taped on three sides to any open chest wound.
B. removing the occlusive dressing if the patient’s breathing status deteriorates.
C. immediate removal of any impaled object from the chest wound.
D. positioning the patient on the uninjured side, so that the lung can inflate more fully.
A
apply an occlusive dressing to seal the wound (not a regular porous dressing, which would allow air to enter easily)
the occlusive dressing should be a few inches wider than the wound
place it over the entire wound and tape on three sides
Choose:
Which of the following signs and symptoms would lead you to believe that your patient had a tension pneumothorax?
A. Decreased blood pressure
B. Severely decreased or absent breath sounds on the injured side
C. Paradoxical motion
D. Tachycardia
B
severely decreased or absent breath sounds on the injured side are the most serious of the signs and symptoms listed that would indicate development of a tension pneumothorax
Choose:
A tension pneumothorax differs from a simple pneumothorax in that:
A. a tension pneumothorax seals off any wounds as a result of the increased pressure.
B. a tension pneumothorax puts pressure on the heart, the great vessels, and the unaffected lung.
C. a simple pneumothorax is not a serious emergency.
D. a simple pneumothorax is not caused by an external open wound.
B
air that leaks from the lung has no avenue of escape if there is no opening to outside chest
pressure builds up in chest cavity (compressing the heart, the great vessels, and unaffected lung)
Choose
Blunt abdominal trauma that causes the perforation of a vascular structure in the abdomen may cause:
A. spinal cord damage to motor nerve roots.
B. loss of function to the lower extremities.
C. significant blood loss.
D. rupture of the urinary bladder, with resultant chemical inflammation
C
the vessels literally hold all the blood… so expect some bleeding
An injury to a vascular structure such as the liver or spleen typically involves a serious and often life-threatening hemorrhage. There is often heavy blood loss into the abdominal compartment that may go unrecognized for a period of time.
Choose:
You arrive on scene to an alert 27-year-old male patient with an obvious abdominal evisceration. He is restless, pale, cool, and diaphoretic.
After administering high-concentration oxygen, you should immediately:
A. cover the wound with a dressing moistened with saline.
B. use a dry dressing on the wound, covered by aluminum foil.
C. have the patient lie flat.
D. transport.
A
Do not touch or try to replace any eviscerated, or exposed, organs. Apply a sterile dressing moistened with sterile saline over the wound site. Some EMS systems may recommend that you apply an occlusive dressing as well. It may be necessary to remoisten the dressings with additional saline to ensure that the eviscerated organ or organs do not dry out. In cases of large eviscerations, maintain warmth by placing layers of bulky dressing over the moistened dressing.
Choose:
You respond to the scene of a 24-year-old gunshot victim and find your patient to have a decreased mental status as well as hypotension. You note absent breath sounds on the left side of his chest, where you notice a puncture wound.
From what is this patient most likely suffering?
A. Pericardial tamponade
B. Commotio cordis
C. Flail chest
D. Tension pneumothorax
D
air can enter chest cavity from puncture chest wound with nowhere to escape
pressure builds up in chest cavity (compressing the heart, the great vessels, and lung)
pressure increase is what causes hypotension, unilateral absent lung sounds, etc.