Triage and Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

What are some classical signs of shock?

A

Tachycardia, Prolonged CRT, Elevated lactate, pale mm, tachypnea, low SPO2

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2
Q

What is the order of priority in Triage?

A
Respiratory System
Cardiovascular System
Neurological System
Abdominal Organs
Musculoskeletal System
Integumentary System
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3
Q

What are two things you need to check in the respiratory system in trauma?

A

Airway - ET or Tracheostomy

Breathing

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4
Q

Three most common respiratory injuries?

A

Pulmonary contusions (bruises)
Pneumothorax
Rib fractures

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5
Q

Radiographs are indicated if you have a thoracic trauma case, How do pulmonary contusions show up on a radiograph?

A

Appears as an infiltrate, no anatomical pattern, may take up to 12 hours to show pathology radiographically. So if they are clinical and nothing else explains it - its probably a pulmonary contusion

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6
Q

If you can’t radiograph a suspected pneumothorax, what else can you do that is diagnostic and therapeutic?

A

Thoracocentesis of both sides of the chest

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7
Q

What is the biggest obstacle to treatment of rib fractures in trauma cases?

A

Pain inhibits breathing but they need to be hemodynamically stable before being given analgesics

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8
Q

If a dog with rib fractures comes in with shock, what is the first step?

A

Fluid resuscitation 1/4 shock dose before analgesia

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9
Q

What type of fluid do you give for a shock patient with pulmonary contusions?

A

To avoid pulmonary edema: Isotonic crystalloids but use 1/2 shock dose and you can bolus colloids or hypertonic saline if needed

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10
Q

Shock dose protocol for internally hemorrhaging patients?

A

Do 1/4 shock dose with isotonic fluids over 30 mins, monitor bp and stop when it is stable at 90 bp

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11
Q

What type of neurological problem do you need to immediately immobilize the patient?

A

Spinal cord injuries

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12
Q

What are some signs that there may be abdominal injuries in a patient?

A
Perioneal penetration
Unexplained shock 
Organ evisceration
Free gas on rads
Bacteria or debris on abdominal tap
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13
Q

What is the preferred means of confirming abdominal injury with trauma patients?

A

Abdominocentesis

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14
Q

What does it mean if the tap fluid pcv is greater than the peripheral pcv?

A

Laceration and internal hemorrhage is likely. Medical management has lower morbidity and mortality than surgery.

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15
Q

How can you determine if you have a uroabdomen with out the use of a radiograph?

A

Abdominocentesis and the pcv is lower than peripheral blood. You place this fluid on an AZOSTIX and compare BUN to peripheral blood. Easy uroabdomen diagnosis.

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16
Q

What type of fractures can result in 25% blood loss?

A

Femoral and Pelvic fractures. These may need blood transfusions and surgery to stop the bleeding. But definitive fracture repair is usually delayed until patient is stable (1 - 5 days)

17
Q

What is one key to successful traumas?

A

Reassessing our trauma patients continually, things can change very quickly.