Iatrogenic Injuries and Emergencies Flashcards
How should you drag a horse?
From spine side
Backwards
Protect eyes
What is a sign of smoke inhalation? How do you diagnose this?
Smoke/black around nostrils
Endoscope
How do you treat non-severe burns?
Cool skin with cool water, clip hair and lavage with very dilute chlorohexidine
What is a good indicator of blood loss?
Lactate
PCV takes 24 hours to change
What should tissue be in order to be able to close the wound by suturing?
< 8 hours old and healthy tissue
Or wounds where anatomical alignment/accuracy is essential (lips, eyes, nostrils)
When should staples NOT be used?
If there is tension around the wound
If anatomical accuracy/alignment is essential
When is secondary intention healing indicated?
Tissue > 8 hours old
Or no way to close skin defect
Or significant contamination
What is sequestrum formation?
What is the treatment?
When the cortex of the bone is exposed
Results in
Won’t heal, despite antimicrobials
Surgical intervention (e.g. curette out) needed
What are two causes of drainage tracts?
Sequestrum formation
Foreign material in wound
What 3 things must the wound bed be in order for a skin graft to be accepted?
- Vascularised
- Free of infection
- Free of necrotic tissue
What 3 things are important to assess when assessing limb injuries?
- Is the animal in shock (tachycardia, hypovolaemia)
- Weight-bearing
- Amount of blood loss
What is a common oral antimicrobial used in management of wounds? What class of drugs should it NEVER be used concurrently with, and why?
Trimethoprim sulphonamide
Alpha 2 agonists
Fatal arrhythmias
When are sutures/staples typically removed?
10-14 days later
Which 2 type of skin grafts can be done under standing sedation and local anaesthetic?
Pinch/punch grafts
Full thickness grafts
What type of skin grafts are most likely to be accepted?
Modified Meek Micrografts