1 / 38

Bleeding And Shock Chapter 6/8

Bleeding And Shock Chapter 6/8. Sources of External Bleeding. Arteries Veins Capillaries. Arterial Bleeding. Most serious / arteries are usually deep in the body Rapid and profuse blood loss Bright red / spurts Less likely to clot Must use external means to stop blood flow.

nona
Télécharger la présentation

Bleeding And Shock Chapter 6/8

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. Bleeding And ShockChapter 6/8

  2. Sources of External Bleeding • Arteries • Veins • Capillaries

  3. Arterial Bleeding • Most serious / arteries are usually deep in the body • Rapid and profuse blood loss • Bright red / spurts • Less likely to clot • Must use external means to stop blood flow

  4. Venous Bleeding • Steady flow / bluish-red • May be profuse • More easily controlled • Veins are closer to the body surface • Can be serious

  5. Capillary Bleeding • Easily controlled • Blood oozes • Road rash

  6. Blood Vessel Spasm • Severed arteries • Artery draws back into the tissue • Artery constricts and slows bleeding • Partially severed arteries • Associated with greater blood loss • Example: amputations

  7. Definitions • Hemorrhage: Rapid blood loss • Adult: 1 quart may lead to shock • Child: 1 pint loss of blood • Dressing • A protective covering for a wound – p.150 • Bandage • A material used to hold a dressing in place

  8. Dressings • Used to control bleeding • Prevents contamination • Dressings should be: • Sterile • Larger than the wound • Thick, soft, compressible • Lint free (no cotton balls)

  9. Types of Dressings • Gauze pads • Adhesive strips • Trauma dressings • Improvise • Donut shaped

  10. Dressings • Application • Wash hands • Dressing should extend over edges of wound • Do not touch dressing surface that is to be next to the wound • Place medications directly onto pad • Cover with a bandage • Removal of Dressings • Soak “stuck” dressing in warm water

  11. Bandages Are Used For: • Holding dressings in place • Applying pressure • Prevent or reduce swelling • Provide support or stability

  12. Application of Bandages • Leave toes and fingers exposed if possible • Bandage too tight? Check for color, circulation, temperature • Wrap towards the heart • Small end of bone to large end

  13. Types of Bandages • Roller gauze • Improvised • Triangular • Cravat • Adhesive / paper tape • Adhesive strips • P.150-152

  14. Tourniquets • Rarely recommended • Damages nerves and vessels

  15. Types of Wounds And Application of Bandages And Dressings Will Be Addressed Later

  16. Someone Has Cut Their Leg: What Should You Do? (external bleeding / depends on severity) • Call for help when necessary • Protect yourself from bodily fluids • Expose the wound • Apply sterile gauze pad (dressing) • Apply constant,direct pressure for 10minutes(don’t peak)

  17. Cut Leg • If dressing becomes blood soaked • do not remove dressing, add others over it • After 10 minutes, if bleeding persists • apply pressure harder and over a wider area for 10 more minutes (seek help)

  18. Additional Options • Elevate limb above heart level • Apply pressure at a pressure point • When bleeding stops: • Apply pressure bandage (roller gauze) • Wrap towards the heart

  19. Problem Bleeders • Hemophiliacs • Aspirin

  20. When Not To Apply Direct Pressure • Protruding bone • Skull fracture • Embedded object • May use a donut shaped pad

  21. Internal Bleeding • Look for abdominal: • Pain • Tenderness • Rigidity • Bruises

  22. Internal Bleeding • Look for: • Black stools • Bright red stools • Cough or vomit with blood • Fractured ribs or bruises

  23. Internal Bleeding: What To Do • Monitor ABC’s • Lay on side if appropriate (expect vomiting) • Treat for shock • Raise legs 8-12 inches (if conscious) • Cover victim • Bruises: Ice, ace wrap, elevate

  24. Shock • Occurs when the circulatory system fails • Resulting in inadequate blood flow to some part of the body • A MAJOR CAUSE OF DEATH !!!

  25. Shock #2 • Always treat injured victims for shock • Shock: • can be prevented • cannot be reversed

  26. Types of Shock • Cardiogenic • Heart fails to pump sufficient blood supply

  27. Types of Shock • Neurogenic • Spinal cord damage • Drug overdose • Vessels dilate • Blood supply insufficient to fill vessels

  28. Types of Shock #2 • Septic • Result of a bacterial infection • Vessels lose ability to contract

  29. Types of Shock #3 • Hypovolemic (Fluid Loss) • Most common type • Blood loss • Dehydration from vomiting, diarrhea or profuse sweating

  30. Shock: What To Look For • Pale, cold, clammy skin • Altered mental status • Rapid breathing and pulse • Unresponsiveness • Nausea and vomiting

  31. Shock: What To Do • First, care for life threatening injuries • If the face is red, raise the head, • (injuries to upper half of body – raise the upper half of body) If the face is pale, raise the tail. (injuries to lower half of body, raise the lower half of the body)

  32. Shock: What To Do #2 • If consciousand appropriate, place victim on back, raising legs 8-12 inches EXCEPT those needing ½ sitting position (listed on next slide) • Cover victim, over and under • Do not let victim eat or drink • May suck on wet cloth

  33. Shock: When To Place In A Half Sitting Position • Difficulty breathing • Head injuries (when appropriate) • Strokes • Chest injuries • Penetrating eye injuries • Heart attack • Unconsciousness

  34. Anaphylaxis or Anaphylactic Shock • Massive allergic reaction by the body’s immune system

  35. Causes Of Anaphylactic Shock • Medications • Penicillin and related drugs, aspirin, sulfa drugs,meds and alcohol • Foods and food additives • Monosodium glutamate, peanuts • Plant pollens • Bee stings • Radiographic dyes

  36. Characteristics of Anaphylaxis • Usually comes on in minutes / Peaks in 15-30 minutes • Sensation of warmth • Intense itching of soles of feet and palms of hands • Breathing difficulties • Tightness and swelling in throat • Coughing, sneezing, wheezing • Tightness in chest

  37. Characteristics of Anaphylaxis #2 • Increased pulse rate • Swollen face, tongue, mouth • Nausea and vomiting • Dizziness • Blue around lips and mouth

  38. Anaphylaxis: What To Do • Check ABC’s • Use ice pack on bee sting • Inject epinephrine (dilates bronchioles) • P.442 (hopefully victim will have some) • Inject in outside part of thigh, hold for 10 seconds • May need to repeat • Get help immediately (float trip) • Benedryl – too slow for major emergency, but worth a try

More Related