Initial Assessment and Management: Presented by Fayez Abillama, MD
Initial Assessment and Management: Presented by Fayez Abillama, MD
Initial Assessment and Management: Presented by Fayez Abillama, MD
Simple
Safe
Systematic
Initial Assessment and Management
1.Prioritize patients;
obstructed airway receives greater
priority than a stable patient with a
traumatic amputation.
Triage and organization of care:
2.Resource intensive;
how to maximize the number of
patients who are salvaged under the
prevailing conditions.
In this situation you treat those with
best survival chances with the need of
least time and supplies
Triage and organization of care:
B Breathing + Ventilation
or laryngeal fracture
• Inability to intubate after paralysis
• Equipment failure
Initial Assessment and Management
Pitfalls
• Lucid interval commonly occur with Acute Epidural Hematoma
( Talk and die ), this emphasizes the need for frequent
Neurologic Re-evaluation
The head CT scan for trauma identifies space-occupying
lesions and directs operative evacuation. The lenticular
shape of this lesion identifies it as an epidural hematoma.
Courtesy of Kevin Kilgore, MD; Carson Harris, MD;
and David Hale, MD, Regions Hospital, St Paul, Minn.
Periorbital ecchymosis, or “raccoon eyes”
" is a classic diagnostic sign of basilar skull fracture.
Courtesy of Kevin Kilgore, MD;
Carson Harris, MD; and David Hale, MD,
Regions Hospital, St Paul, Minn.
Initial Assessment and Management
Pitfalls
• Early control of hemorrhage will minimize hypothermia
Initial Assessment and Management
2ry. Survey
1 Complete History
2ry. Survey
1 Complete History
A allergies
M medications
L last meal
E events / environment / mechanism of injury:blunt,
penetrating, burn, hazardous
environment
Initial Assessment and Management
2ry. Survey
2 Head to toe examination
2ry. Survey
3 Re-assessment of vital signs
Objectives:
1. Identify new Clinical findings
2. Discover deterioration
3. Assure that life threatening injuries are managed
4. Diagnose underlying medical problems
Initial Assessment and Management
2ry. Survey
3 Re-assessment of vital signs
Done by:
1. Clinical Reassessment
2. Monitoring of LOC, PR, Urine O/P, ABP, ABG,
CVP
3. Review of Diagnostic results
4. Use of Analgesia
Initial Assessment and Management
2ry. Survey
4 Complete neurological examination GCS.
• LOC / GCS
• Pupils
• Complete neurological examination
Initial Assessment and Management
2ry. Survey
5 Special procedures, Specific X-rays and laboratory studied
2ry. Survey
1 Complete History
Definitive care
Transfer