Paediatric Resusctation Guide Flashcards

1
Q

Rather than shockable rhythms, children are more likely to have

A

pulseless electrical discharge (PEA)
or
asystole

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2
Q

what aetiologies for cardiorespiratory arrest are children more likely to have

A

more often a respiratory illness or airway obstruction leading to hypoxia and a respiratory arrest
also, hypovolaemia and shock from sepsis, blood loss in trauma, severe gastroenteritis or anaphylaxis

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3
Q

how is the child anatomy different

A

larger head, short neck, large tongue, larger epiglottis, smaller airways, more compliant chest

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4
Q

DRSABCDE

A

danger
responsiveness
send for help
airways
breathing
circulation
diability
environmental, exposure, and extended examination

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5
Q

airways BLS

A

open the mouth, look for obstruction and remove if possible
do not use the blind finger sweep as this can damage mucosa
open the airway by positioning the patient
- neutral for infants
- sniffing position for children
head tilt and chin lift / jaw thrust

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6
Q

breathing BLS

A

assess if the patient is breathing
look for chest wall movement
if they are not breathing give two effective rescue breaths
expired air resuscitation: create a seal over the mouth and blow out for 1-2 seconds, watching for the chest wall rising

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7
Q

circulation BLS

A

assess for signs of life, and a pulse (either brachial or femoral) for no longer than 10 seconds.
do not assess carotid in infants, too difficult due to short necks.
if there are no signs of life commence external chest compressions - cardiopulmonary resuscitation CPR
ensure the patient is on a hard flat surface
finger/hand position = lower half of sternum
compress 1/3 of the chest wall 15 compressions:2 breaths

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8
Q

disability BLS

A

assess for neurological function using AVPU
A = alert GCS 15
V = responds to voice GCS 12
P = responds to pain GCS < 9
U = unresponsive GCS 3

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9
Q

Environment, exposure and extended examination BLS

A

expose the patient to look for rashes, life-threatening injuries

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10
Q

Airways ALS

A

use a suction catheter if required
can use forceps to remove foreign bodies under direct vision
use an airway adjunct :
- oropharyngeal airway (guedel): use in unconscious patients. insert under direct vision
- nasopharyngeal airway: lubricate and insert into the nostril. dont use if there is suspicion of a base skull fracture.

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11
Q

breathing ALS

A

use a bag valve mask with a reservoir
bag sizes:
neonate - 250ml
infants - 500ml
children - 1500ml
apply high flow oxygen

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12
Q

circulation ALS

A

attach monitoring and assess rhythm
defibrillation pad position: one over apex in the mid-axillary line, just below the right sternum
in small infants, you can place one on the chest to the left of the sternum and one on the back below the left scapula
follow the APLS algorithm
insert at least one IV cannula (take bloods)
if this is unsuccessful, use intraosseous
give fluid bolus: 20ml/kg of 0.9 saline

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13
Q

APLS algorithm

A
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14
Q

what are the shockable rhythms

A

ventricular fibrillation and pulseless ventricular tachycardia

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15
Q

what are the non-shockable rythms

A

asystole
PEA

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16
Q

asystole

A
17
Q

PEA

A
18
Q

ventricular fibrillation

A
19
Q

pulseless ventricular tachycardia

A
20
Q

reversible causes of cardiac arrest

A

4 Hs and 4 Ts

hypoxia
hypovolaemia
hyper/hypokalaemia/metabolic disorders
hypothermia/hyperthermia
tension pneumothorax
tamponade
toxins
thrombosis (pulmonary/coronary)

21
Q

disability ALS

A

neurological examination:
- assess pupillary size and reaction
- tone and reflexes in the limbs
- focal neurological signs
- signs of raised intracranial pressure
- signs of meningism and evidence of seizures (treat)

22
Q

environmental, exposure and extended examination ALS

A
  • temperature, normalise hypothermia in drownings
  • check BGL and correct
    expose patient and fo a full secondary survey exmination - to ellicit underlying cause
23
Q

what to do for sepsis or meningitis

A

antibiotics

24
Q

what to do for anaphylaxis

A

adrenaline

25
Q

what to do for seizures

A

benzodiazepines is first line

26
Q

post resus care

A

re-evaluate ABCDE
12 lead ECG
treat precipitating causes
re-evaluate oxygenation and ventilation
temp control (cool)

27
Q

fluids in children

A

0.9% saline, 20ml/kg bolus
can be given approx 1-3 times
in trauma consider packed red blood cells (10ml/kg) early rather than repeating saline

28
Q

dehydration

A

mild = 5%
moderate = 7.5%
severe = 10%
replacement fluids may be given as oral rehydration solution via a nasogastric tube, or as intravenous fluids

29
Q

IV fluid in children should be

A

0.9% saline, 5% dextrose
more dextrose for neonates

30
Q

replacement fluid =

A

weight x %dehydration x 10
in mL per 24 hours
add this to their daily maintenance fluid requirement, subtract any bolus fluid given

31
Q

maintenance fluids (mL per 24 hours)

A

Always use 0.9% saline + 5% dextrose
(Exception: increased dextrose % in neonates)
< 10kg = 100mL/kg
10-20kg = 1000mL + 50mL/kg (for each kg above 10kg)
>20kg = 1500mL + 20mL/kg (for each kg above 20kg)

32
Q
A