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Bleeding and Volume Replacement Therapy

Bleeding and Volume Replacement Therapy. J. Málek. Casualty treatment. call for medical help vital functions control of major external bleeding general examination prevention of secondary injuries detailed examination. Blood. in adults 40-50 ml/kg, in children 50-60 ml/kg

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Bleeding and Volume Replacement Therapy

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  1. Bleeding andVolume Replacement Therapy J. Málek

  2. Casualty treatment • call for medical help • vital functions • control of major external bleeding • general examination • prevention of secondary injuries • detailed examination

  3. Blood • in adults 40-50 ml/kg, in children 50-60 ml/kg • oxygen and CO2 transport • water and mineral balance • transport of metabolites • transport of hormones • immunity

  4. Blood • red cells • white cells • thrombocytes • plasma

  5. Bleeding • arterial, venous, capillary, mixed • minor, major • localisation • normal, abnormal

  6. Minor bleeding • clean with water • apply antiseptic around the wound • apply sterile dressing

  7. Bleeding • external • internal • from body orifices • mixed

  8. Major external bleeding • lay the victim down to supine position • compress and elevate the bleeding site (if possible) • pressure dressing • manual compression • pressure points • tourniquet • do not try to clean a large wound (remove only obvious debris) • never remove a foreign body

  9. Internal bleeding • pain • signs of injury • signs of shock

  10. Internal bleeding • positioning • call for emergency • nothing per os

  11. Bleeding from body orifices • mouth • nose • ear • haemoptoea • vomiting of blood • rectal bleeding/melaena • vaginal bleeding

  12. Volume replacement therapy • crystalloid solutions • colloids solutions • volume substituents • volume expanders • blood

  13. advantages no allergic reactions easily available low effect on blood coagulation easily mobilised disadvantages move quickly from blood vessels no transport capacity for oxygen Crystalloid solutions

  14. Colloid solutions • dextrans • gelatine • starch

  15. advantages stay longer in blood vessels rapid volume replacement (molecular weight dependent) easily available disadvantages allergic reaction possible various effect on blood coagulation difficulty in mobilisation no transport capacity for oxygen Colloid solutions

  16. Blood and blood products • packed red cells • fresh frozen plasma • thrombocytes • various factors

  17. Risks of blood transfusion • incompatibility • infection • allergy • fever • overloading • bleeding problems • immunity

  18. Blood transfusion • indication • patient´s consent • taking blood sample to transfusion dept. • cross match in TD • check documentation and transfusion bag • security test • biological test

  19. Blood groups

  20. Transfusion • Colecting blood sample from the patient • Transfusion station • Blood group • Crossmatching • Delivery • Ward • Check delivery list • Safety test • Biological test • Monitoring • Save blood pack for 24 hours

  21. Indications for blood transfusions • acute hemorrhage • anemia • bleeding disorders • hematological diseases

  22. Acute bleeding

  23. Shock

  24. Definition Acute state in which tissue perfusion is inadequate to maintain the supply of oxygen and nutritients necessary for normal cell function, which results in widespread hypoxia.

  25. Reasons for inadequate tissue perfusion • A decreased circulating blood volume – hypovolaemic shock • A failure of the heart to pump effectively – cardiogenic shock and obstructive shock • A massive increase in peripheral vasodilatation – neurogenic shock • Combination – septic shock, anaphylactic shock

  26. Stages of shock • Initial stage – anaerobic metabolism • Compensatory stage – centralisation of circulation • Progressive stage – increased acidosis, leakage of fluid from the capillaries and formation of microthrombes • Refractory stage

  27. Classification of shock • Hypovolaemic shock • Cardiogenic shock • Anaphylactic shock • Septic shock • Neurogenic shock

  28. Hypovolaemic shock • Haemorrhage • Plasma loss • Extracelular fluid loss

  29. Symptoms of hypovolemia according to blood loss

  30. Estimated blood loss in trauma

  31. Signs of haemorrhagic shock • Pale, cold, clammy skin, decreased capilary refill • Rapid, weak and thready pulse • Thirst • Decreased urine production • Increased respiratory rate • Change in mental status – late sign

  32. First aid • Prevent further blood loss • Antishock or autotransfusion position • Activation of emergency service • Prevention of hypothermia • Prevention of positioning trauma • Treatment of other injuries, immobilisation of fractures • Nil by mouth, no oral or i.m. medication

  33. Medical treatment • Intravenous access • Surgery • Fluid replacement • Artificial ventilation • Pharmacological support of shock organs • Monitoring: BP, P, SaO2, CPV, urine output

  34. Cardiogenic shock • Heart failure, cardiomyopathy • Decreased cardiac output • First vasoconstriction, next vasodilatation due to acidosis • Pulmonary oedema • Cold, clammy and cyanotic skin • Mortality 80 per cent

  35. Anaphylactic shock • Severe allergic reaction • Degranulation of mast cells • Vasodilatation, increased vascular permeability, oedema, bronchospasm

  36. Septic shock • Bacteria or bacterial toxins • Released histamine and other mediators of inflammation • Oxygen demand – supply mismatch • Vasodilatation • Tachycardia, hypotension, fever of hypothermia

  37. Neurogenic (spinal) shock • Loss of sympathetic nerve activity • Massive vasodilatation

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