Episode 80.0 – Penetrating Chest Trauma Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast

    • Medicine

This week we feature a short primer on penetrating chest trauma focusing on circulation first over airway and breathing.







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Tags: ED Thoracotomy, EFAST, Resuscitative Thoracotomy, Trauma, Ultrasound











Show Notes

Take Home Points



Don’t rush to the airway. In most situations, you have some time so resuscitate before you intubate. Give blood products and get the BP up a bit to give yourself a little better physiologic situation in which to intubate.

Start your massive transfusion immediately if the patient is shocked. There’s always a delay in getting products but the earlier you start, the shorter the delay.

Include US in your primary survey. Your E-FAST should start with the cardiac window, then go to the lungs and then, finally, the abdomen. This order focuses on finding pathology you can fix immediately.

If the patient is shocked and peri-arrest or recently lost vitals, open the chest and look for a fixable injury. Start with opening the pericardium to relieve tamponade, identify and repair cardiac wounds and cross clamp the aorta.



Read More

Larry Mellick: Open Thoracotomy Video

EMCrit: Podcast 081 – An Interview on Severe Trauma with Karim Brohi

LITFL: Penetrating Chest Trauma

EM:RAP: How to Crack the Chest

EM: RAP: Stabbed in the Chest





Read More

This week we feature a short primer on penetrating chest trauma focusing on circulation first over airway and breathing.







https://media.blubrry.com/coreem/content.blubrry.com/coreem/Podcast_Episode_80_0_Final_Cut.m4a







Download





Leave a Comment











Tags: ED Thoracotomy, EFAST, Resuscitative Thoracotomy, Trauma, Ultrasound











Show Notes

Take Home Points



Don’t rush to the airway. In most situations, you have some time so resuscitate before you intubate. Give blood products and get the BP up a bit to give yourself a little better physiologic situation in which to intubate.

Start your massive transfusion immediately if the patient is shocked. There’s always a delay in getting products but the earlier you start, the shorter the delay.

Include US in your primary survey. Your E-FAST should start with the cardiac window, then go to the lungs and then, finally, the abdomen. This order focuses on finding pathology you can fix immediately.

If the patient is shocked and peri-arrest or recently lost vitals, open the chest and look for a fixable injury. Start with opening the pericardium to relieve tamponade, identify and repair cardiac wounds and cross clamp the aorta.



Read More

Larry Mellick: Open Thoracotomy Video

EMCrit: Podcast 081 – An Interview on Severe Trauma with Karim Brohi

LITFL: Penetrating Chest Trauma

EM:RAP: How to Crack the Chest

EM: RAP: Stabbed in the Chest





Read More