Primary Survey - Little People, Big Differences

- Airway: Larger occiput/tongue ā place shoulder roll for neutral alignment. Uncuffed ETT size formula: $(Age/4) + 4$.
- Breathing: Pliable chest wall means significant internal injury can occur without rib fractures.
- Circulation: Tachycardia is the earliest sign of shock. Obtain Intraosseous (IO) access if IV attempts fail.
- Disability: Assess using the Pediatric Glasgow Coma Scale (pGCS).
- Exposure: High surface-area-to-mass ratio ā risk of hypothermia; use aggressive warming measures.
ā Hypotension is a late, ominous sign, often heralding imminent cardiac arrest.
Head & Spine Trauma - Protecting the Noggin
- Anatomical Risks: Large head-to-body ratio & weak neck muscles ā risk for high cervical spine (C1-C2) injuries.
- Open fontanelles can temporarily compensate for rising intracranial pressure (ICP), masking early signs.
- Unique Injury Patterns: Be vigilant for Spinal Cord Injury Without Radiographic Abnormality (SCIWORA).
- Assess consciousness with the Pediatric Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS).
- Cushing's triad (hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respirations) is a late and ominous sign of ā ICP.
ā A child with neurological signs of spinal injury but normal X-ray/CT scans is characteristic of SCIWORA; MRI is required for diagnosis.

Thoracic & Abdominal Trauma - Insides & Out
- Pliable Thorax: Compliant chest wall often means significant internal injury (e.g., pulmonary contusion, diaphragmatic rupture) without overlying rib fractures.
- Mobile mediastinum ā risk of rapid decompensation from tension pneumothorax.
- Abdominal Focus: Solid organs are more vulnerable than hollow viscera.
- Non-operative management is the standard for hemodynamically stable liver or spleen lacerations.
- Serial exams are crucial; peritonitis suggests hollow viscus injury.
ā The spleen is the most commonly injured organ in pediatric blunt abdominal trauma, followed by the liver.
Musculoskeletal Trauma - Bendy Bones & Breaks
- Pediatric bones are more porous and pliable with a thick, metabolically active periosteum, leading to unique fracture patterns and faster healing.
- Common Types:
- Greenstick: Incomplete fracture; cortex breaks on one side, bends on the other.
- Torus (Buckle): Compression failure of the cortex, often at the metaphysis.
- Plastic Bowing: Bending without a visible cortical break.
- Physeal (Growth Plate) Fractures: Classified by the Salter-Harris system.
- š SALTER Mnemonic:
- I: Straight across
- II: Above
- III: Lower
- IV: Through
- V: ERasure (crush)

ā Salter-Harris Type II is the most common type, typically involving the distal radius. Prognosis is generally excellent as it spares the germinal layer of the physis.
Non-Accidental Trauma - Hidden Clues
- History: Vague, inconsistent with injury severity, or significant delay in seeking care.
- Fractures: High-specificity patterns like metaphyseal corner fractures, posterior rib fractures, or multiple fractures in various stages of healing.
- Bruising: š TEN-4 mnemonic: Bruising on Torso, Ears, or Neck in a child < 4 years old. Patterned bruises are a major red flag.
ā Retinal hemorrhages are a hallmark of abusive head trauma (shaken baby syndrome) and are often found on fundoscopic exam.

- Children have unique injury patterns due to anatomical differences; head trauma is more common.
- The pediatric airway is smaller and anterior; consider uncuffed ET tubes in young children.
- High risk of hypothermia due to a larger body surface area-to-mass ratio.
- Fluid resuscitation is weight-based (20 mL/kg crystalloid); the Broselow tape is a key tool.
- Tachycardia, not hypotension, is the earliest reliable sign of shock.
- Always maintain a high index of suspicion for non-accidental trauma (NAT).
- C-spine injuries may present as SCIWORA (Spinal Cord Injury Without Radiographic Abnormality).
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