Trauma Flashcards
What are the major mechanisms of traumatic injury child older than 1y?
- transport
- drowning
- burns
What are the common forces causing paediatric trauma?
- MVA
- Car v kid
- Fall from height
What are the common sources of pressure causing trauma?
- Lap seat belt syndrome
- Handle bar
- MBA
Why are children more vulnerable to abdominal injury from blunt force trauma?
- More exposed organs: ribs are more compliant in kids, and they are more exposed. Vulnerable organs of both solid and hollow
- Less protective habitus
- Smaller torso: less body fat
What are the red flags for abdo trauma injuries?
- abdo tenderness
- ecchymosis
- abrasions
- femoral fracture
- GCS below 13
Why are gastric tubes indicated in paediatric trauma?
•Gastric tube * very important to put in (NOT naso gastric or oro gastric due to risk of perforation)
○ Purpose: prevents acute gastric dilatation
○ Prevents vomiting and aspiration
○ Improves imaging quality
○ Improves ventilation
Why is paediatric intubation more difficult
- Shape of the epiglottis is horseshoe shaped and projects posterior at 45o
- Cricoid ring is the narrowest point in the airway:
- -a). cannot confirm the size of the ET tube by visualising
- -b).the cuff of the ET tube sit at the level of cricoid ring, which then takes up valuable airway diameter.
- -c). tissue in this area is susceptible to oedema
- Trachea is short: increases risk of dislodgement of ET tube
- Cervical spine: larger occiput so head forward flexed when supine
How does the paediatric airway differ from adult?
- Smaller: greater risk of obstruction
- Larger tongue and smaller oral cavity
- Infants have larger occiput - head flexed when supine
- Infants nose breathers
- Trachea more cartilaginous and soft
- Larynx is higher and more anterior
How are children different in respect to breathing?
- Infant ribs more horizontal therefore only move up with inspiration, not up and out. Limits ability to increase TV
- Diaphragmatic breathing in infancy therefore must decompress stomach
- Thin compliant chest well = intercostal retraction
- Fewer Type I fibres in respiratory muscles
Assessment of breathing?
- Look: mvt
- Listen: crackles
- Feel: crepitus, surgical emphysema
- Percuss
What is the purpose of breathing assessment?
• Effort of breathing - more or less (respiratory failure)
• Efficacy of breathing - O2 saturation, chest expansion,
- Effects of respiratory inadequacy
What are the indications for intubation and ventilation?
- Persistent airway obstruction
- Predicted obstruction (e.g. inhalation, burns)
- Loss of airway reflexes
- Inadequate ventilatory effort or increase fatigue (resp muscle failure)
- Disrupted ventilatory mechanism (e.g. large flail)
- Persisten hypoxia despite O2
- Controlled ventilation to manage raised ICP
- GCS below 8
Why do you intubate at GCS below 8?
No muscle tone to expectorate vomit so high risk of aspiration
How does blood volume differ in kids?
• 80-90ml/kg v 65-70ml/kg
• Therefore relatively small volumes of blood will constitute significant blood loss in small children ie a 100mL experienced by 5kg child = 10% of TBV
Implication: must monitor and record all blood loss
How are children different in circulation?
- Systemic vascular resistance lower
- Hypotension late sign (good comp)
- Fixed SV (limited to HR to inc CO)
- Smaller vessels and more subcut therefore difficult to get access