Trauma Anaesthesia Flashcards
What is the Haemorrhage classification 1 - 4
Class 1
- Blood loss without haemodynamic consequence
- < 15%
Class 2
- Blood loss leads to SNS activation (↑HR and DBP)
- 15 -30%
Class 3
- Blood loss leads to ↓ BP (ineffective SNS)
- 30 - 40%
- may prompt damage control procedure
Class 4
- Blood loss leads to unresponsive patient with ↓↓ BP
- > 40%
What is adult versus child vs infant blood volume
Adult: 70 ml/kg
Child: 80 ml/kg
Infant: 90 ml/kg
Why does coagulopathy occur in trauma
- Acidosis impairs coagulation
2. Hypoperfusion: endothelium release thrombomodulin and activated protein C to prevent microcirculation thrombosis
What is haemostatic resuscitation
RCC:FFP:PLTs(+cryoprecipitate) in a 1:1:1 ratio
What should ideally be used during preoperative resuscitation in trauma patients
Damage control resuscitation = Controlled permissive hypotensive haemostatic resuscitation using a 1:1:1 ratio of RCC:FFP:PLT with antifibrinolytic therapy (tranexamic acid)
Ideally use viscoelastic haemostatic assay = Thromboelastography to guide administration of blood components.
What is the leading cause of blood transfusion related death
Transfusion associated lung injury (TRALI)
Define and describe the score used to determine the likelihood that a patient will require a massive transfusion
The assessment of blood consumption score (ABC score)
- Penetrating trauma (1 point)
- SBP < 90 (1 point)
- HR > 120 (1 point)
- Positive eFAST (1 point)
2 or more points predicts likely massive transfusion will be required.
Describe preoperative preparation for major trauma case
Document possibility of awareness in notes
A - Prep difficult airway trolley
B - Machine check/IMALES/drugs
C - Rapid infusion catheters/large bore catheters/A-line/Adrenalin infusion/FDP’s
D - Consider possibility of C-spine: personal for manual in-line
E - Warm theatre. Warm fluids to 39 deg C.
Describe induction technique in a trauma patient
RSI
Etomidate/Ketamine - low dose
Midazolam (amnestic)
Succinylcholine
Volatile - 0.5 MAC
What are the principles of damage control surgery
- Stop haemorrhage
- Limit gastrointestinal contamination of the abdominal compartment
- Exclusion of definitive repair of complex injuries
- eg. staple intestines closed and reconnect later to prevent abdominal compartment contamination - Interruption of procedure with packing to catch up with maintaining adequate perfusion
- Once damage control is complete transfer to ICU for correction of: hypothermia, coagulopathy and acidosis
- Once these have significantly improved –> definitive surgical repair can proceed.