1 / 33

Pediatric Trauma

Pediatric Trauma. Julie Williamson, DO Clinical Assistant Professor of Anesthesia and Pediatrics Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital. Objectives: to review. Epidemiology of trauma The Primary Survey (ABCs) Fluid resuscitation and massive transfusion Non-Neurologic Injury

kobe
Download Presentation

Pediatric Trauma

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pediatric Trauma Julie Williamson, DO Clinical Assistant Professor of Anesthesia and Pediatrics Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital

  2. Objectives:to review • Epidemiology of trauma • The Primary Survey (ABCs) • Fluid resuscitation and massive transfusion • Non-Neurologic Injury • Traumatic Brain Injury

  3. Introduction • Trauma is the leading cause of death in children and young adults in the US (ages 1-44 years old) • Most pediatric deaths from trauma involve motor vehicles • Brain injury is most common cause of death • In children, about half involve multiple organs or body regions

  4. 5 Leading Causes of Death, California2006, All Races, Both Sexes WISQARSTMProduced By: Office of Statistics and Programming, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Data Source: National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), National Vital Statistics System

  5. Ages 1 to 4 years

  6. Ages 5 to 9 years

  7. Ages 10 to 14 years

  8. Incidence and Mortality of Pediatric Trauma From Roger’s Textbook of Pediatric Intensive Care, fourth edition

  9. Changes in Mortality1987 - 2004 http://www.usa.safekids.org National Center for Health Statistics. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Vital Statistics System. WISQARS Injury Mortality Reports, 1987 to 2004. Hyattsville (MD): National Center for Health Statistics, 2007

  10. Children are different • Smaller bodies mean more kinetic injury into a smaller space  impact on multiple organs • Larger BSA  heat loss • Anterior liver and spleen, mobile kidneys • Immature bone has increased elasticity  more soft tissue injury (misleading lack of fractures) • Head:body greater, cranial bones thinner • More robust response to catechol driven vasoconstriction  preserved blood pressure until catastrophic shock ensues • More likely to suffer a respiratory than cardiac arrest

  11. Initial AssessmentThe “Platinum Half Hour” • “Scoop and run” vs. “stay and play” • Out of hospital airway management • Improved outcomes associated with care in a pediatric trauma center/hospital with PICU • Loss of airway and IV access twice as common during transport, 10 times more common if not a specialized team

  12. Image from calhoun.cc.al.us

  13. The Pediatric AirwayAnatomic Differences and Trauma Management • Relatively larger tongue – most common cause of airway obstruction • Larger adenoids • Floppy omega shaped epiglottis • Larynx appears more cephalad and anterior • Cricoid ring is narrowest part of airway • Narrow tracheal diameter, smaller distance between rings • Shorter tracheal lengths ( 4 cm newborn, 7 in 18 month old) • Large airways more narrow

  14. Primary Survey:Airway and C Spine • Assume C spine injury in pediatric trauma • Jaw thrust, oral airway • Assume full stomach/RSI indicated • Induction agents – risks of propofol, ketamine, etomidate and succinylcholine • Pre-oxygenation • Avoid nasal intubation with severe facial/head trauma. Blind NI less successful in children • Consider cuffed ETT • Needle cricothyroidotomy (no slash trachs in kids) • Orogastric tube to decompress stomach

  15. A note about C spines • More likely to have high cervical trauma under 8 years old (OA fulcrum) • Radiographs are over and under-read • SCIWORA • Harder to immobilize • CT scan vs. MRI Tuggle David W, Garza Jennifer, "Chapter 46. Pediatric Trauma" (Chapter). Feliciano DV, Mattox KL, Moore EE: Trauma, 6th Edition: http://www.accesssurgery.com.laneproxy.stanford.edu/content.aspx?aID=169962.

  16. Primary Survey:Breathing • Apply 100% oxygen immediately while doing primary survey • Watch for age-appropriate respiratory rates • Hypercarbia/inadequate ventilation often under appreciated • Pneumothorax more difficult to diagnose by auscultation due to transmitted breath sounds. If hemodynamically unstable, needle chest early • Respiratory arrest from C spine injury

  17. Primary Survey:Circulation • Intravenous access • 3 attempts, 90 seconds, or obtunded  IO • Large bore PIV is optimal • CVL or cut down PIV • Control of hemorrhage • Direct pressure over bleeding • Tourniquets? • Hemorrhage into thorax, retroperitoneum, thigh or intracranial in infants • More then 3cc/kg/hour from chest tube is an indication for operation • Aortic injury is 2nd cause of death after TBI

  18. Primary Survey:Circulation • Hypotension is a late finding correlating to loss of 30% of circulating blood volume • Monitor for poor perfusion or confusion • 20cc/kg warmed isotonic solution X 2 then PRBC • Crystalloid vs. colloid? • 0.9 NS or LR • Colloid • 3% saline • Albumin • Hetastarch  coagulopathy • Blood products • Over-resuscitation • Edema, abd compartment syndrome, ARDS, hypothermia

  19. Blood Products and Massive Transfusion Protocols • Emergency release blood – O neg or O pos • ABO & Rh type specific uncrossmatched blood • Dilutional thrombocytopenia after replacement of ½ blood volume • After replacement of one blood volume with type O, stick with O • Early coagulopathy • MTP protocols: 1:1:1 PRB to FFP to Platelets • “Storage lesion” • Whole warmed blood • Activated factor VII in children?

  20. Primary Survey: Disability Pediatric GCS or AVPU Check pupil size and reactivity

  21. Primary Survey: Disability • Orthopedic injuries • Primary cause of operative intervention in pediatric trauma • Greenstick and buckle fractures • Growth plate injury • Supracondylar fractures • Immobilize and monitor vascular status • Vascular injury • 95% limb salvage

  22. Primary Survey: Disability • Fully undress patient – keep warm • Look under collar and splints • Log roll patient, exam back • Rectal exam

  23. Primary Survey: Exposure and Environment • Complete visual inspection • Maintain normothermia • Platelet inhibition below 34 C • 100% mortality below 32 C • Hyperthermia causes secondary injury in TBI

  24. The TRIAD OF DEATH isHYPOTHERMIAACIDOSISCOAGULOPATHY

  25. Monitor and Reassess • Perfusion and mentation • Lactate or base deficit • Do NOT wait for labs or radiographs to indicate need to evacuate pneumothorax or transfuse

  26. Secondary Survey • Continuously resuscitate and reassess – vital signs every 5 to 15 minutes • Easy to miss orthopedic injuries • Plain films • FAST • CT

  27. Thoracic Injury • 4 – 25% of pediatric trauma, up to 40% mortality • Low SBP, elevated RR, external thoracic injury or femur fracture associated with intrathoracic injury • Compliant chest wall • Mobile mediastinum • Pneumothorax • Hemothorax • Aortic injury accounts for 14% of mortality

  28. Abdominal Injury • Thin body wall and closely spaced organs • Any external markings or tenderness are ominous • Gastric decompression to benefit ventilation • Diaphragmatic rupture • Gastric rupture • Bowel injury injury • Splenic or hepatic injury • Renal injury

  29. Traumatic Brain Injury Among children ages 0 to 14 years, TBI results in an estimated: • 2,685 deaths; • 37,000 hospitalizations • 35,000 emergency department visits annually What causes TBI? • Falls (28%); • Motor vehicle-traffic crashes (20%); • Struck by/against events (19%); and • Assaults (11%) Langlois JA. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control; 2004.

  30. Subdural and epidural hematomas Vascular injuries – SAH and IVH serve as markers of severity

  31. Control of secondary injury • Mass effect • Parenchyma • CSF • Blood • Hypoxia • Ischemia • Target thresholds in children?

  32. Management of TBI:Control secondary injury • Normothermia vs. hypothermia (why doesn’t this work in kids??) • Normoventilation: PCO2 < 25 ischemia • Osmolar therapy - rheology • Mannitol • Hypertonic Saline • ICP and CPP mangement – what numbers are adequate in children? • Decompressive craniotomy • CSF drainage • Glycemic control – not a simple answer • Coagulopathy -30% incidence of DIC in children with severe TBI

  33. References • Avarello JT and Cantor RM, Pediatric Major Trauma: An approach to evaluation and management. Emerg Med Clin N Am 25 (2007) 803-836. • Tuggle David W, Garza Jennifer, "Chapter 46. Pediatric Trauma" (Chapter). Feliciano DV, Mattox KL, Moore EE: Trauma, 6th Edition: http://www.accesssurgery.com.laneproxy.stanford.edu/content.aspx?aID=169962. • Letarte Peter, "Chapter 20. The Brain" (Chapter). Feliciano DV, Mattox KL, Moore EE: Trauma, 6th Edition: http://www.accesssurgery.com.laneproxy.stanford.edu/content.aspx?aID=157936.

More Related