Surgery- Trauma & Burns Flashcards
Pulmonary contusion
lung parenchymal bruising (due to transmitted kinetic energy from blunt thoracic trauma) with resulting alveolar hemorrhage and edema.
Can occur with or without rib fracture
S&S of pulmonary contusion
- <24hrs blunt thoracic trauma
- Tachypnea
- Hypoxeamia
- Decreased breath sounds
Diagnostic testing Pulmonary contusion
Most sensitive: Ct.
Initial CXR often normal
Repeat CXR or CT shows patchy, irregular alveolar infiltrates not restricted by anatomical borders
Management of pulmonary contusion
Pain control
Pulmonary hygiene (incentive spirometry, chest PT)
Respiratory support
Atelectasis from blunt thoracic trauma
Pain leads to shallow breathing and lung tissue collapse.
CXR: bilateral linear densities in collapsed regions
Ddx: ARDS vs pulmonary contusion
ARDS: bilateral alveolar infiltrates, 24-28hrs after trauma
Contusion: ipsilateral non-lobular alveolar infiltrates, <24hrs after trauma.
Intraperitoneal bladder rupture
Blunt lower abdominal trauma causing full bladder to rupture at its weakest point, the dome.
Presentation of intraperitoneal bladder rupture
Inability to void
Urinary ascites
Abdominal distention
↑ BUN & Cr (peritoneal reabsorption)
Diagnosis intraperitoneal bladder rupture
retrograde cystography
Presentation of retroperitoneal free air
When a hollow organ perforated writhing the retroperitoneum GI spillage may be initially sequestered away from the intreaperitoneal space. This may delay the development of classic S&S of perforation.
Initial assessment algorithm for blunt chest trauma.
Unstable: Ressusitation and Evaluation. Fast, CXR, ECG, CT
Stable & high risk mechanism: treat as unstable
Stable & low risk: ECG and CXR.
ECG in blunt chest trauma
ECG is used to evaluate for blunt cardiac injury BCI (e.g. tampon and, wall rupture) which can be clinically silent. Sinus tachycardia, arrhythmia and ST changes seen with BCI
Abnormal ECG requires observation (risk arrhythmia), cardiac enzyme testing and echo.
Management of suspicious compartment syndrome
Confirm diagnosis by measuring compartment pressures; a delta pressure (diastolic- compartment) <30 is suggestive of CS
Compartment syndrome
limb-threatening condition caused by increased pressure within an enclosed facial space that limits perfusion of muscle and nerve tissues.
S&S compartment syndrome
Pain out of proportion to injury Increased pain on passive stretch Rapidly increasing & tense swelling Paresthesia Maintained distal pulses
Loss common:
Decreased sensation
Motor weakness/ Paralysis