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Airway/C-spine. Breathing. Circulation. Disability. Exposure. Secondary Survey.
Airway and C-Spine
- General airway principles
- “If they can’t speak, they can’t control their airway”
- “If GCS is <8, intubate”
- In the real world, it’s a clinical judgement call
- General c-spine principles
- Clear c-spine with NEXUS/Canadian rules
- Otherwise stabilize spine and place in cervical collar
Breathing
- If patient has tachypnea, hypoxemia, or respiratory distress
- Give O2
- Examine for tension pneumothorax
- Deviated trachea
- Asymmetric breath sounds
- If concerned perform needle decompression
- THEN
- Tube thoracostomy
Circulation
- If patient has tachycardia, hypotension, or obvious blood loss
- Stop the bleed
- Emergent transfusion
- Consider early OR if unstable
- In the real world, CT is frequently obtained pre-op regardless of stability
Disability
- Pupils
- GCS
- If concerned for head injury
- Obtain CT head without contrast
Exposure
- Fully undress the patient
- Warm blankets
Secondary Survey
- Visualize everything
- Palpate everything
- Bedside chest/pelvic x-ray and FAST scan
Common Labs
- Type and screen
- CBC
- Electrolytes
- Urinalysis
- EKG
- Blood alcohol level
- Lactic acid (if concerned for shock)
Common Imaging
- CT head without contrast
- CT maxillofacial without contrast
- CT cervical spine without contrast
- CTA neck
- CT abdomen/pelvis WITH contrast
- Retrograde urethrogram
- Additional x-rays
Common Treatments
- Blood products
- Tetanus immunization
- Analgesics
Additional Reading
- Advanced Trauma Life Support (Wikipedia)
- Round 5 – Geriatric Fall (EM Clerkship)
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