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Abdominal & Genitourinary Trauma

Abdominal & Genitourinary Trauma. EMS Professions Temple College. Abdominal Trauma. Most patients survive long enough to reach hospital Common factors that lead to death Delayed resuscitation Inadequate volume Inadequate diagnosis Failure to evaluate Delayed surgery. Abdominal Trauma.

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Abdominal & Genitourinary Trauma

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  1. Abdominal & Genitourinary Trauma EMS Professions Temple College

  2. Abdominal Trauma • Most patients survive long enough to reach hospital • Common factors that lead to death • Delayed resuscitation • Inadequate volume • Inadequate diagnosis • Failure to evaluate • Delayed surgery

  3. Abdominal Trauma • Death results from increased hemorrhage due to: • solid organ injuries • hollow organ injuries • abdominal vascular injuries • pelvic fractures • Additional Injury • Spillage of hollow organ contents • Peritonitis

  4. Prevention Strategies • What are possible strategies for preventing deaths due to abdominal and genitourinary trauma? • What role can EMS Systems play in these strategies?

  5. Abdominal Boundaries • Diaphragm • Anterior abdominal wall • Pelvic skeletal structures • Vertebral column • Muscles of the abdomen and flanks

  6. Abdominal & Pelvic Cavities • Retroperitoneal • Kidneys, ureters, bladder, reproductive organs, inferior vena cava, abdominal aorta, pancreas • Peritoneal • Bowel, spleen, liver, stomach, gall bladder • Pelvic • Rectum, ureters, pelvic vascular plexus, femoral arteries, femoral veins, pelvic skeletal structures, reproductive organs

  7. High Index of Suspicion • Mechanism of Injury • Seat Belts • Steering wheel in unrestrained • Trauma to abdomen, lower chest, back, flank, buttocks, and perineum • Pain in uninjured shoulder • Kehr’s Sx • Murphy’s Sx • Turner’s Sx • Hypovolemic shock or diffusely tender abdomen w/ no identifiable cause  bleeding UPO

  8. Mechanisms of Injury • Blunt mechanisms • Forces • Compression forces • Shearing forces • Deceleration forces • Sources • MVCs • Seat belt injury • Steering wheel injury • Falls • Assaults • Blast

  9. Mechanisms of Injury • Penetrating mechanisms • Low velocity • knife • ice pick • Medium velocity • gunshot/handgun • shotgun • High velocity • high power hunting rifle • military weapon

  10. Mechanisms of Injury • Penetrating Injury - Ballistics • Low velocity • injury usually limited to depth and travel of weapon • injury usually limited to area near penetration • Medium velocity • travel direction easily redirected • greater external soft tissue injury • High velocity • energy wave • cavitation

  11. Pathophysiology • Hemorrhage • Limited external signs • Rapid blood loss possible • Hypovolemic shock • Blood does not result in peritonitis • Spillage of Contents • Enzymes, Acids, Bacteria • Chemical irritant to peritoneum • Localized pain  Generalized abdominal pain • Muscular spasm (rigid abdomen)

  12. Solid Organ Injuries • Death usually 2° to hemorrhage • May to due to blunt or penetrating mechanism

  13. Solid Organ Injuries • Spleen • Frequently injured solid organ • Usually due to blunt trauma • Often 2° trauma to ribs 9-11 on left side • Bleeds easily • Capsule around spleen tends to promote slow development of shock • Rapid shock onset when capsule ruptures • May present with left shoulder pain • diaphragm irritation

  14. Solid Organ Injuries • Liver • Largest organ in abdomen • Frequently injured organ • May be due to blunt or penetrating trauma • Often 2° trauma to ribs 8-12 on right side • Bleeding • Slow and contained under capsule • Enters peritoneal cavity

  15. Solid Organ Injuries • Pancreas • Lies across lumbar spine • Usually due to penetrating trauma • also due to compression against vertebral column by steering wheel, handle bars, or other object • Sudden deceleration produces straddle injury • Very little hemorrhage • Irritation to peritoneum • fluid loss from leakage of pancreatic enzymes • auto-digestion of tissue

  16. Hollow Organ Injuries • Death may result from hemorrhage and/or content spillage • May result from penetrating or blunt trauma

  17. Hollow Organ Injuries • Stomach • Usually injured due to blunt trauma • Full stomach prior to incident  risk of injury • Spillage of contents into peritoneal cavity • Immediate pain, tenderness, guarding, and rigidity • Small and Large Intestines • Usually injured due to penetrating trauma • Spillage of contents into peritoneal cavity • Immediate pain, tenderness, guarding, and rigidity

  18. Hollow Organ Injuries • Colon • Spillage of contents into peritoneal cavity • Immediate pain, tenderness, guarding, and rigidity • Spillage of bacteria into peritoneal cavity • May take 6 hrs to develop S/S of peritonitis • Small Bowel • Spillage of contents into peritoneal cavity • Immediate pain, tenderness, guarding, and rigidity • Less bacteria • May take 24-48 hours for S/S to manifest

  19. Abdominal Vascular Injuries • High mortality due to rapid blood loss • Survival dependent upon extent of injury and time to surgery • abdominal aorta, inferior vena cava, femoral arteries • shearing • dissection • transection

  20. Pelvic Injuries • Increase risk of intraperitoneal structure injury • vascular structures • hollow organs

  21. Genitourinary Trauma

  22. Kidney Trauma • 50% of all GU trauma • Blunt • Direct blow to back, flank, upper abdomen • Suspect in Fx of 10th - 12th ribs or T12, L1, L2 • Acceleration/Deceleration • Shearing of renal artery/vein • Penetrating • Rare, usually associated • GSW or Stab wound

  23. Kidney Trauma S/S • Gross Hematuria • 80% of cases • absence does not exclude renal injury • Localized flank/Abdominal pain • Pain/Tenderness of lower ribs, upper lumbar spine, groin, shoulder or flank • Hypovolemia

  24. Ureter Trauma • Less than 2% of GU trauma • Usually secondary to penetrating trauma • Rupture • Extraperitoneal • Intraperitoneal

  25. Extraperitoneal Rupture • Urine in umbilicus, anterior thighs, scrotum, inguinal canals, perineum • Dysuria • Hematuria • Suprapubic Tenderness • Induration • redness secondary to tissue damage from urine

  26. Intraperitoneal Rupture • Urgency to void, inability to void • Shock • Abdominal distention

  27. Bladder Injury • Most often injured due to blunt trauma • Full bladder may increase risk of injury • Often associated with pelvic fractures • Should not attempt urinary catheterization • Localized pelvic pain

  28. Urethra • Usually due to pelvic fracture, deceleration or straddle injuries • Blood at external meatus • Perineal bruising • Butterfly bruise • Scrotal Hematoma

  29. Urethra • Urinary catheter’s should not be passed if these are present. • Rectal exam should be performed before passing a urinary catheter in a patient whose urethra may be disrupted

  30. Male External Genitalia • Accidental or Intentional Injury • Highly vascular w/rich sensory nerve supply • Pain • Psychological issues • Hemorrhage

  31. Male External Genitalia • Penile/Scrotal • Zipper • Foreign body • Avulsion/Amputation • Fracture • Scrotal/Testicular • Penetrating injury • Blunt injury • Management • Control bleeding / Indirect ice / Analgesia • Psychological and Modesty Concerns

  32. Female External Genitalia • Usually intentional 2° assault • Primarily soft tissue injury • Hemorrhage likely • Look for other injuries • Sexual Assault • Emotional state provides additional challenge • Managed as other soft tissue bleeding • control hemorrhage • facility with trained personnel (sexual assault)

  33. Abdominal Trauma Assessment • Less important to diagnose exact injury • Treat clinical findings • Management the same regardless of specific organ injured

  34. Abdominal Rigidity • Do notrely on rigidity • Bleeding may not cause rigidity if free hemoglobin is not present • Bleeding in retroperitoneal space will not cause rigidity • May cause flank ecchymosis • Adult can accommodate 1.5 liters w/o distention

  35. Bowel Sounds • Little value, if any, in pre-hospital assessment of trauma patient • Absent if shock is present, regardless of abdominal injury • Requires minutes for adequate assessment • Does not give any information you cannot get some other way

  36. Abdominal Trauma Assessment • Evidence may be masked by other injuries or intoxicants • head injury • hypoxia • alcohol • drugs

  37. Abdominal Trauma Assessment • Mechanism & Kinematics • History and Physical Exam • Patient Complaints • Inspection • External signs of injury • abrasions, ecchymosis, “seat belt sign” • distention • wounds • impaled object • evisceration • perineal blood, blood at meatus

  38. Abdominal Trauma Assessment • History and Physical Exam • Gentle palpation • Percussion and Auscultation of little value • Evidence of shock • out of proportion to obvious injuries • Guarding • Evidence of peritonitis • Pelvic instability

  39. Abdominal Trauma Management • C-Spine Motion Restriction IF indicated • Airway • Assist ventilations if needed • High flow O2 • Control External Bleeding • Determine need for rapid transport/surgery • Not all need trauma center • Transport to appropriate Facility

  40. Abdominal Trauma Management • En route • Treat shock • MAST/PASG application w/o inflation • May be helpful in pelvic fracture • IV of LR/NS enroute • Titrate fluids to BP ~ 90 mm Hg • Indirect ice may be helpful in genitalia injury • Collect and package amputated genitalia

  41. Abdominal Trauma Management • Abdominal Evisceration • Do not replace organs into abdomen • Cover exposed bowel with saline moistened multi trauma dressing • Cover first dressing with second dry dressing • Do not use 4 x 4

  42. Abdominal Trauma Management • Leave impaled objects in place • Shorten if necessary for transport • Leave part of object exposed • NPO • Caution with • Sedatives • Narcotic Analgesics

  43. Trauma In Pregnancy Leading cause of death during pregnancy MVCs result in 50% of prenatal mortality

  44. Trauma In Pregnancy • Most common cause of fetal death from trauma is maternal death • Consider possibility of pregnancy in any female trauma patient of childbearing age • Sexual assault may be the cause of trauma • What is best for mom is best for baby • Treatment for pregnant patient same as non pregnant patient • Consideration for emergent C-section

  45. Alterations In Pregnancy • Pregnant uterus can compress inferior vena cava when patient supine • Decreases cardiac output by 30 - 40% • Blood volume increasesby 40-50% • 30% blood loss may occur before symptoms develop

  46. Alterations In Pregnancy • Blood flow to uterus and placenta can be selectively reduced • Fetus can be in distress while mother appears to be stable

  47. Alterations In Pregnancy • As uterus increases in size and blood flow • Increased risk of: • Penetration • Rupture • Placental abruption • Premature rupture of membranes • 10-20% increase in oxygen demand • Decreased peristalsis and delayed gastric emptying • Increased risk of emesis and aspiration

  48. Pregnancy Trauma Management • C-spine Motion Restriction • Transport with patient on left side or elevate right side of board • Airway • anticipate vomiting &  risk of aspiration • Assist ventilation as needed • High flow O2 • 3rd trimester O2 demand increases 10-20%

  49. Pregnancy Trauma Management • Control External Bleeding • Determine need for rapid transport/surgery • Not all need trauma center • Consider needs of sexual assault victim • Transport to appropriate Facility • Consider need for emergent C-section • Mark height of fundus on mother’s abdomen • Reassess frequently

  50. Pregnancy Trauma Management • Treat for Shock • Aggressive fluid resuscitation • Increased intravascular volume • Increased volume requirements to resuscitate • Consider MAST (legs only) • Prepare for complications of pregnancy • Premature labor & delivery • Hemorrhage complications • abruptio placenta • uterine rupture

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