Breathing assessment and management

Breathing assessment and management

Breathing assessment and management

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Breathing Assessment - The Primary Survey 'B'

  • Assess (IAPP Method):
    • Inspect: Symmetrical chest rise, respiratory rate, cyanosis, penetrating wounds.
    • Auscultate: Equal, bilateral breath sounds.
    • Palpate: Tracheal deviation, subcutaneous emphysema, fractures.
    • Percuss: Hyper-resonance (pneumothorax) or dullness (hemothorax).
  • Manage Life-Threatening Injuries Immediately:
    • Tension Pneumothorax: Needle decompression.
    • Open Pneumothorax: Three-sided occlusive dressing.
    • Massive Hemothorax: Chest tube (>1500 mL blood).
    • Flail Chest: Positive pressure ventilation.

⭐ A tension pneumothorax is a clinical diagnosis; do not delay treatment for a chest X-ray. Immediate needle decompression is life-saving.

Needle Decompression Landmarks for Tension Pneumothorax

Life-Threatening Injuries - Thoracic Trauma's Hit List

  • Tension Pneumothorax: Air leak acts as a one-way valve.
    • Signs: Hypotension, JVD, absent breath sounds, tracheal deviation (late sign).
    • Tx: Immediate needle decompression (2nd ICS MCL or 5th ICS AAL) followed by chest tube.
  • Open Pneumothorax (Sucking Chest Wound): Defect >2/3 tracheal diameter.
    • Signs: Sucking sound, bubbling wound, impaired ventilation.
    • Tx: Three-sided occlusive dressing, then chest tube.
  • Massive Hemothorax: >1500 mL blood or >200 mL/hr output.
    • Signs: Shock, ↓ breath sounds, dullness to percussion.
    • Tx: Volume resuscitation, large-bore chest tube (36-40 Fr), possible thoracotomy.
  • Flail Chest: ≥2 ribs fractured in ≥2 places.
    • Signs: Paradoxical chest wall motion. Underlying pulmonary contusion is the major problem.
    • Tx: O2, aggressive pain control (e.g., epidural), positive pressure ventilation if needed.
  • Cardiac Tamponade: Blood in the pericardial sac compresses the heart.
    • Signs: Beck's Triad (Hypotension, JVD, muffled heart sounds).
    • Tx: Pericardiocentesis, surgical repair.

⭐ In tension pneumothorax, hypotension is due to superior vena cava (SVC) obstruction, leading to drastically reduced preload-a form of obstructive shock.

Tension Pneumothorax: Clinical and Radiologic Clues

Definitive Management - Tubes, Drains & Vents

  • Chest Tube Thoracostomy:

    • Indications: Pneumothorax, hemothorax, empyema.
    • Site: 4th or 5th intercostal space, anterior to mid-axillary line.
    • Tube Size: Large bore (28-32 Fr) for hemothorax to prevent clogging.
    • ⚠️ Warning: Surgical thoracotomy indicated if initial output >1500 mL or persistent bleeding >200 mL/hr for 2-4 hours.
  • Mechanical Ventilation:

    • Indications: Apnea, GCS ≤ 8, impending airway compromise, refractory hypoxemia, severe flail chest.
    • Strategy: Lung-protective ventilation (6-8 mL/kg ideal body weight).

High-Yield: A persistent large air leak after chest tube insertion is highly suggestive of a tracheobronchial tree injury, a surgical emergency.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Tension pneumothorax is a clinical diagnosis; treat immediately with needle decompression followed by a chest tube.
  • An open pneumothorax (sucking chest wound) requires a three-sided occlusive dressing to function as a one-way valve.
  • Massive hemothorax (>1500 mL initial output) is an indication for immediate operative thoracotomy.
  • Flail chest from multiple rib fractures causes paradoxical chest wall motion and often requires positive pressure ventilation.
  • The primary goal is ensuring adequate oxygenation and ventilation.

Practice Questions: Breathing assessment and management

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 32-year-old man is brought to the emergency department 15 minutes after falling 7 feet onto a flat-top wooden post. On arrival, he is in severe pain and breathing rapidly. His pulse is 135/min, respirations are 30/min, and blood pressure is 80/40 mm Hg. There is an impact wound in the left fourth intercostal space at the midaxillary line. Auscultation shows tracheal deviation to the right and absent breath sounds over the left lung. There is dullness to percussion over the left chest. Neck veins are flat. Cardiac examination shows no abnormalities. Two large-bore intravenous catheters are placed and intravenous fluid resuscitation is begun. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

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Flashcards: Breathing assessment and management

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Is placement of a foley (urethral) catheter contraindicated in urethral injury?_____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Is placement of a foley (urethral) catheter contraindicated in urethral injury?_____

Relatively contraindicated

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