Haemorrhage Control Flashcards

1
Q

management of a haemorrhage casualty

A

SAFE approach

Reassure

CAT HAEM
Quick Look – alertness, respiratory effort, skin colour

AIRWAY

BREATHING

CIRCULATION
Blood on the floor
Four more (chest, abdomen, pelvis, long bones)
Pulse

Consider treating for shock

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2
Q

Define a wound

A

A wound is a break in
the continuity of tissues

Can be open or closed

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3
Q

Types of wounds

6

A

Laceration

Puncture

Contusion

Gunshot

Incision

Abrasion

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4
Q

Types of external bleeds + Definition

A

Capillary bleeding – Dark red and oozes from wound slowly and steadily

Venous bleeding – Darker than arterial and flows steadily

Arterial bleeding – Characteristically brighter red and spurts.

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5
Q

Describe a closed wound

Causes

A

In a closed wound, soft tissue beneath the skin is damaged but no break in epidermis

Characteristic closed wound is a contusion

Trauma to the nerve endings causes pain, and leakage of fluid into spaces between the damaged cells produces oedema

If small blood vessels are disrupted a discoloured mark (bruising) will cover the area

If large blood vessels are torn beneath the contused area this results in haematoma (collection of blood beneath the skin – evidenced as a lump with a bluish discolouration).

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6
Q

Internal bleeding signs and symptoms

+ Lungs, Stomach, kidneys, large intestine

A

njury

Colour – pale

Contusion, swelling and tenderness

Haematoma (swelling filled with
blood)

The above can be unreliable!
Pulse rate increased

Respiratory rate increased

PR and especially RR are more reliable indicators – pay attention to these observations and take them properly, otherwise you may miss internal bleeding!

Lungs:
Haemoptysis = Coughing blood: appears as red/pink froth or spots of blood

Stomach:
Haematemesis = Vomiting blood (‘coffee grounds’ appearance of partially digested blood, or ‘frank’ blood from upper GI bleeds)

Kidneys:
Haematuria = Urinating blood (from dark urine to bright red in appearance)

Large Intestine:
Melena = Very dark red or black, sticky tar-like substance.

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7
Q

4 more

A

Actively look for possible internal bleeding

Chest (feel, assess resonance, listen, look including back/sides)
Abdomen (soft, non-tender?)
Pelvis (look for deformity, think about mechanism) - Pelvic Binder
Long bones (Femoral Fracture? KTD?)

If suspected, evacuate urgently – the definitive treatment is surgery.

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8
Q

Describe an open wound

A

An open wound is characterised by an interruption in continuity of the skin

Open wounds are potentially more serious than closed wounds for two reasons:
Vulnerability to infection
Greater potential for serious blood loss

Injuries involving compromise of nerves, vessels, muscles, tendons or ligaments whilst either being contaminated or involve a foreign body -require skilled intervention and urgent evacuation.

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9
Q

Principles of treating an open wound

A

Control bleeding by whatever method is most effective

Keep wound as clean as possible, cut away clothing, wash loose dirt DO NOT pick out embedded foreign matter

Cover with appropriate dressing, avoid dry dressings unless controlling significant haemorrhage

Never definitively close a wound unless you have seen its base (extent of depth).

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10
Q

Rules for severed limbs

A

Rules for severed limbs:

Clean it with normal saline

Place inside a plastic bag or pack it in some form of padding

Keep as cool as possible

The limb should be sent to the receiving facility as soon as possible with the patient.

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11
Q

Open abdominal wounds

Considerations/treatment

A

Do not push protruding bowel/organs back in

Cover wound (keep moist)

Keep the casualty warm

Raise legs if horizontal wound with no protrusions

Do give pain relief.

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12
Q

3 types of external bleeds

A

Arterial spurts
Venous flow
Capillary ooze

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