Chest Trauma Management

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Initial Assessment - Chest Check Champions

  • Primary Survey (ABCDE): Rapid evaluation; Airway (C-spine!), Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure.
  • Identify & Treat Life Threats: 📌 ATOM-FC
    • Airway Obstruction
    • Tension Pneumothorax: Needle decompress (2nd ICS MCL / 5th ICS AAL), then chest tube.
    • Open Pneumothorax: Three-sided occlusive dressing, then chest tube.
    • Massive Haemothorax: >1500mL blood or >200mL/hr. Chest tube; consider thoracotomy.
    • Flail Chest: Paradoxical movement. Analgesia, O2, consider PPV.
    • Cardiac Tamponade: Pericardiocentesis.

      ⭐ Beck's triad (hypotension, muffled heart sounds, JVD) is indicative of cardiac tamponade, but present in only a minority of cases.

  • Chest Exam: Inspect, Palpate (crepitus, tenderness), Percuss (dull/hyperresonant), Auscultate.

Specific Injuries - Injury Intel Insights

InjuryPathophysiologyDiagnosisAnesthetic Implications
Pulmonary ContusionAlveolar hemorrhage, edema.CXR (patchy infiltrates, 24-48h lag), CT. Hypoxemia.↓ Compliance, V/Q mismatch. Judicious fluids. LPV, PEEP. Epidural.
Myocardial ContusionMyocardial bruise, arrhythmias, ↓ contractility.ECG (arrhythmias, ST changes), ↑Troponins, Echo.Arrhythmia/hypotension risk. Avoid depressants. Invasive monitoring.
Tracheobronchial InjuryTrachea/bronchus tear, near carina.SubQ emphysema, pneumomediastinum, hemoptysis. Bronchoscopy (gold).Difficult airway. Spontaneous ventilation if able. FOB. One-lung ventilation.
Diaphragmatic RuptureAbdominal content herniation. Left > Right.CXR (bowel in chest), CT. Often missed.↓ FRC, aspiration risk. RSI. No N2O. PPV may worsen herniation.

Airway & Ventilation - Breath Bossing Basics

⭐ Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) is generally the technique of choice for securing the airway in trauma patients, assuming no anticipated difficult airway where awake fiberoptic intubation might be safer.

  • Airway Securement:
    • C-spine protection (Manual In-Line Stabilization - MILS); RSI preferred.
    • Avoid nasal intubation (suspected basilar skull fracture).
  • Ventilation Strategy:
    • Lung Protective Ventilation: Tidal Volume (TV) 6-8 mL/kg Ideal Body Weight (IBW), PEEP 5-10 cmH₂O.
    • Target $P_aO_2/FiO_2 > \textbf{300}$. Permissive hypercapnia (if no raised Intracranial Pressure - ICP).
  • One-Lung Ventilation (OLV): Indications: surgical exposure, isolate lung pathology (e.g., massive hemoptysis, bronchopleural fistula).
FeatureDouble Lumen Tube (DLT)Bronchial Blocker (BB)
PlacementHarder, larger diameterEasier, via Endotracheal Tube (ETT)
IsolationExcellentGood, may need adjustment
SuctioningBilateral accessLimited to ETT lumen
Post-op VentETT exchange neededRemove BB, ETT stays
  • 📌 DOPE for acute desaturation on ventilator: Dislodgement, Obstruction, Pneumothorax, Equipment failure.

Management of Intraoperative Hypoxemia during OLV:

Analgesia & Operative Care - Relief & Repair Rundown

ModalityPros (LA Info)ConsContraindications
TEAGold std, bilateral (0.1-0.25% Bupi/Ropi)Hypotension, motor block, PDPHCoagulopathy, sepsis, ↑ICP, hypovolemia
PVBUnilateral, ↓BP (15-20mL 0.25-0.5% LA)Difficult, PTXSimilar to TEA, local infection
ICNBSimple, specific (3-5mL/nerve 0.5% Bupi)Multi-jabs, short duration, PTXLocal infection, refusal
SAPBUS-guided, anterolateral (20-30mL 0.25% Bupi)Newer, ↓data severe traumaLA allergy, local infection
  • Op Care: RSI, lung isolation, manage life-threats.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Airway security is paramount; early intubation for severe trauma, hypoxia, or respiratory distress.
  • Tension pneumothorax: immediate needle decompression (2nd ICS MCL), then chest tube.
  • Massive hemothorax (>1500 mL initial / >200 mL/hr) often needs urgent thoracotomy.
  • Flail chest: aggressive analgesia (epidural ideal), PPV for respiratory failure.
  • Cardiac tamponade (Beck's triad) requires emergency pericardiocentesis or thoracotomy.
  • One-lung ventilation (OLV) is key for surgical repair, often with double-lumen tubes.

Practice Questions: Chest Trauma Management

Test your understanding with these related questions

A Patient presented to emergency with multiple rib fractures. He is conscious speaking single words. On examination, respiratory rate was 40/minute and BP was 90/40 mmHg. What is immediate next step?

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Flashcards: Chest Trauma Management

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Minimizing _____ based resuscitation is a part of balanced resuscitation (damage control resuscitation)

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Minimizing _____ based resuscitation is a part of balanced resuscitation (damage control resuscitation)

crystalloid

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