Chest Trauma Flashcards
Causes of Chest Trauma
1. Planned Trauma or Intentional Trauma (Chest Surgery)
- Thoracotomy: Surgical opening into the thoracic cavity
- Pneumonectomy: removes the entire lungs
- Lobectomy: removes the entire lobe
- Wedge Resection: removes a small portion of a lobe
- Segmental Resection: removes a larger portion of a lobe
2. Unplanned Trauma
Penetrating Trauma**
- When a foreign body impales or passes through the body tissues
- Serious injury is possible to heart, lungs and thoracic structures.> Gunshot, stabbing wounds, Arrow, other missiles
Nonpenetrating or Blunt Trauma
- The body is struck by a blunt object (steering wheel)
- External injury may appear minor, but the impact my cause severe, life threatening internal injuries.
\> Falls or blows to the chest (slamming into the steering wheel), deceleration injuries, pedestrian accident, crush injury, explosion
Assessment
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Initial Assessment: ABC’s
\> Airway patency \> Adequate breathing \> Circulatory sufficiency
**Any chest trauma is considered life threatening. **
A Quick History
- What happened?
- What was the mechanism of injury?
- How long ago did it happen?
- Where is the pain?
- Is there anything that makes the pain better or worse?
- What does the pain feel like?
- How severe is the pain on a scale of 1 - 10?
- Is there any medical history?
> Meds??: Coumadin
- Physical Examination
- Chest X-ray
- Lab Data
Chest Trauma Complication: Pneumothorax
Closed and Open
- Presence of air in the pleural space
- Result to a complete / partial collapse of a lung d/t accumulation of air in the pleural space
- Dyspnea, decrease movement of affective chest wall, decrease/no breath sounds on affective side
\> Partial – Complete \> Closed – Open
_Closed or Spontaneous Pneumothorax _
- Most common
- Air enters into the pleural space from a puncture or tear in an internal respiratory structure.
- Accumulation of air in the pleural space w/o apparent antecedent event
\> Puncture into the pleural space \> Not evident; you don’t see it when you look directly at the patient
- Has no associated external wound
- Cause by the rupture of small blebs.
- Spontaneous pneumothorax
Open Pneumothorax
- Air enters the pleural space directly through a hole in the chest wall or diaphragm. ( opening in the chest call
- The air moves in and out with each breath, can hear a sucking or slurping sound which is clearly
audible on the affected side.
\> Only a tiny bit of air escapes after exhaling \> Can lead to lung collapse d/t accumulation of air getting trap in the plural space \> Stab wounds, gunshot and surgical thoracotomy. \> should be stabilize until a physician is present
Chest Trauma Complication: Mediastinal Flutter
- As the air (inspiration) enters the pleural space from an open wound, all the mediastinal structures and the collapsed lung are pushed to towards the unaffected side.
- On expiration these structures move back into the affected side.
Chest Trauma Complication: Tension Pneumothorax
A medical emergency!
- The result of a open pneumothorax
- Result of an untreated chest trauma
- Air enters the pleural space with each breath, becomes trapped there and is not expelled (one-way valve effect) due to an internal injury.
- High intra-pleural pressures with resultant tension on the heart and great vessels.
\> Interfering with the function of the organs and blood flow
- Air continues to enter. Positive pressure builds and the lung collapses. The mediastinal contents shift to the unaffected side.
- Air enters and contents move to the unaffected side
- The functional lung can be twisted which can cause torsion or kinking of great vessels.
\> Blood return to the heart is reduced, \> Cardiac output is reduced \> Blood pressure is lowered. \> Can result in shock and death.
Assessment findings of all pleural injuries
- Tachycardia
- Dyspnea, respiratory distress
- Sudden sharp pain with chest movements, breathing or coughing (suspect broken ribs)
- May have hemoptysis (coughing up blood)
- Diminished or absent breath sounds on the affected side
- Decrease 02 sat
- Frothy Secretion
- Restlessness
- Anxiety
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- Distended neck veins
- Asymmetrical chest wall movement
- Muffled heart sounds
- Subcutaneous emphysema
** > Crepitates**
- Laryngeal & tracheal deviation toward the unaffected side
- Rapid, thready pulse
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- Tightness or pressure in the chest
\> A lot of pressure
- Progressive cyanosis
\> Lips, nail beds, mucous membranes
- Severe hypotension
- Shock
- ABG’s show hypoxia & resp. alkalosis
- Progresses to respiratory acidosis (ICU)
To validate what is going on…
-
Chest x-ray shows tracheal shift away from the affected side and retraction of the lung back from the parietal pleura.
> CXR will help you determine: Bleeding? Fracture ribs? Air?
Emergency Care
- Airway maintenance
-Oxygen
> 2L/min NP - Closed chest drainage will drain off air and blood and helps the lung expand by establishing negative pressure.
- Needle decompression
- Thoracotomy – to repair injured tissues and vessels etc.