1 / 15

Emergency Medicine Education Programme

Emergency Medicine Education Programme. Severe Abdominal Pain Induction 2010. 67 year old male Sudden onset of severe upper abdominal pain Vomited x 2 What else do you want to know?. Pulse 121 BP 143/109 RR 24 Abdomen – upper half rigid and guarded. Patient One.

chibale
Télécharger la présentation

Emergency Medicine Education Programme

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. Emergency Medicine Education Programme Severe Abdominal Pain Induction 2010

  2. 67 year old male Sudden onset of severe upper abdominal pain Vomited x 2 What else do you want to know? Pulse 121 BP 143/109 RR 24 Abdomen – upper half rigid and guarded Patient One

  3. Appropriate Environment Resus / Monitored bed IV access FBC U&Es RBS Amylase G&S IV fluids IV Opiate (morphine) IV antiemetic 12 lead ECG Erect CXR E.D Management

  4. Risk factors Alcohol Pancreatitis PUD PMH Medications NSAIDs Allergies Last Ate / Drank Focused History

  5. CXR Discuss with a Senior

  6. Perforation of peptic ulcer Differential Severe Pain Acute Pancreatitis Cholelithiasis Acute peptic ulcer Other perforation Medical cause - ACS Diagnosis

  7. 74 year old man PMH IHD Sudden onset severe pain left loin radiating to groin Cold and Clammy P 124 BP 187/125 No palpable abdominal mass Tender left lumbar and left iliac fossa Case 2

  8. Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Ureteric Colic Differential Diagnosis ‘Renal Colic’ in a patient >60 is a AAA until proved otherwise

  9. ED Management • Get a senior • and get the surgeons • IV access • large bore cannula x2 • FBC, U&Es, RBS, XM 8 (x2 samples SJUH) • IV fluids & Opiate Analgesia ( morphine) • maintain a palpable radial pulse • but do not infuse to restore normal BP if hypotensive

  10. ED Management - Continued • If need to confirm • bedside ultrasound or • CT if haemodynamically stable • Catheter

  11. Vascular Services in Leeds • Centralised at LGI • Ambulance triage to LGI • Patients at SJUH with definite AAA • referred to Vascular SpR or Consultant at LGI • 999 Paramedic transfer to ED Resus • Moribund or ?AAA patients referred to SJUH surgical team

  12. Principles • ABC care • Effective analgesia based on pain score and re-assessments( titrate to pain score) • Think of medical causes • Always check femorals & other hernial orifices • PR/PV if lower abdominal pain • (Chaperone)

  13. Principles • Always do a urine test and PT in female of child bearing age • Blood tests generally unhelpful • do not delay decision making • Erect CXR if you suspect perforation • Abdominal film if you suspect obstruction

  14. Any Questions ?

More Related