Principles of Resuscitation Flashcards

1
Q

What is resuscitation?

A

Process of correcting physiological disorders in an acutely unwell or injured patient

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2
Q

Who sets the standards for CPR and related disciplines in the UK?

A

The Resuscitation council

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3
Q

What is required for oxygen delivery to organs?

A

Adequate airway, breathing and circulation

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4
Q

What can inadequate oxygen delivery lead to?

A

Organ failure = causes cardio-respiratory arrest

Avoided by early detection and treatment

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5
Q

What are the objectives in initial trauma management?

A

Identify and treat life threatening injuries whilst considering mechanism of injury
Identify any other problem
Arrange appropriate treatment and investigations
Arrange and transfer to definitive care

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6
Q

What are common mechanisms of injury of trauma?

A

RTA = 1/3 of all major trauma presentations

Falls, interpersonal violence, suicide, work place accidents

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7
Q

What is the most commonly affected patient group in trauma?

A

Young men aged 18-40

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8
Q

What is the primary survey of a patient?

A

General impression = airways, breathing, circulation, disability, exposure

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9
Q

What questions should you ask yourself on the initial arrival of an unwell patient?

A

Are we in the best place/position?
What equipment do I need?
Do I have enough help?
Who am I going to call?

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10
Q

What makes up an AMPLE history?

A

Allergies, medications, past medications, last ate, events leading up to presentation

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11
Q

What should be considered alongside the airway?

A

Cervical spine and exsanguinating haemorrhage

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12
Q

What aspects of the airway are assessed?

A

Open/closed, action required, adjuncts, do I need anaesthetic support?

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13
Q

What are some causes of airway obstruction in trauma?

A

Loss of pharyngeal tone with posterior tongue displacement, displaced facial fracture, vomitus/blood/secretions, soft tissue swelling/oedema/inhalation burns, direct laryngeal trauma

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14
Q

How is the airway managed?

A

Basic to advanced airway management depending on skill, possible suction

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15
Q

What should be considered when assessing breathing?

A

Present/absent, adequate ventilation, oxygen source and means of delivering oxygen
Look, feel, percuss and listen, resp rate and O2 sats

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16
Q

Who should get high flow oxygen?

A

All patients

17
Q

What is the management of some life threatening injuries that may affect breathing?

A

Tension pneumothorax = oxygen, needle thoracocentesis, chest drain
Massive haemothorax = oxygen, chest drain, circulatory resuscitation
Flail chest = oxygen, analgesia, advanced ventilatory support

18
Q

What should be ensured when assessing breathing?

A

Oxygenation and ventilation

19
Q

What should be assessed when considering the circulation?

A

Present/absent = pulse assessment, blood pressure, CRT, possible ECG
Adequate perfusion = colour, conscious level

20
Q

What normally causes circulation problems?

A

Haemorrhagic shock = may be concealed

21
Q

What must be considered when assessing IV access?

A
If present, is it working?
If not, what sort of cannula?
Where to put IV line?
What blood samples to take?
Do you want to give fluids, and if so, which fluid?
22
Q

What is the first choice fluid in major trauma?

A

Blood = O negative/type specific or fully cross matched, ideally ratio 1 RCC:1 FFP, permissive hypotension

23
Q

What are interventions for circulation issues, other than IV fluids?

A

Tranexamic acid 1g IV (15mg/kg in children)
Direct pressure/tourniquet
Splint long bones, pelvic binder
Does the patient need theatre/IR to stop bleeding?

24
Q

What are ways to assess disability?

A

Is there any evidence of head trauma?

AVPU, GCS (min 3, max 15), pupils, lateralising signs

25
Q

What are some interventions for problems identified when assessing disability?

A

Prevent secondary brain injury, early neurological signs

26
Q

What should be done when carrying out the exposure part of the primary survey?

A

Quick top to toe = aims to pick up any other significant injuries
Completely expose patient whilst preventing heat loss

27
Q

What is the main objective when assessing a major trauma patient with a suspected spinal injury?

A

Prevent any further injury to the spine

28
Q

What are some methods of preventing secondary injury to the spine?

A

Manual in-line stabilisation (MILS),

Three point fixation = hard collar, blocks, tape

29
Q

What is normally needed to clear cervical spine injury in major trauma?

A

CT scan

30
Q

What is the NEXUS criteria for clearing cervical spine injury in minor trauma?

A
No posterior midline cervical tenderness
No evidence of intoxication
Patient is alert and oriented to person, place, time and event
No focal neurological deficit 
No painful distracting injuries
31
Q

What further investigations should be done after the initial primary survey?

A

Usually whole body CT = aim for CT scan within 30 mins

32
Q

What should b e done after the initial management of the patient has been completed?

A

Re-evaluate = continuous monitoring

Co-ordinate quick transfer, preparing for possible ongoing resuscitation in scan

33
Q

Should other investigations delay CT and definitive management?

A

No = limb x-rays, urinary catheterisation, ECG and ABG shouldn’t delay transfer to CT or definitive treatment

34
Q

How often to patients go straight to surgery?

A

Very rarely

35
Q

What are some pre-hospital interventions?

A

Emergency anaesthetic and intubation, chest procedures, sedation for extrication and splinting, administration of blood products, transfer to major trauma centre