1 / 71

24: Soft-Tissue Injuries

24: Soft-Tissue Injuries. Cognitive Objectives (1 of 6). 5-2.1 State the major functions of the skin. 5-2.2 List the layers of the skin. 5-2.3 Establish the relationship between body substance isolation (BSI) and soft-tissue injuries. 5-2.4 List the types of closed soft-tissue injuries.

fanchon
Télécharger la présentation

24: Soft-Tissue Injuries

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. 24: Soft-Tissue Injuries

  2. Cognitive Objectives(1 of 6) 5-2.1 State the major functions of the skin. 5-2.2 List the layers of the skin. 5-2.3 Establish the relationship between body substance isolation (BSI) and soft-tissue injuries. 5-2.4 List the types of closed soft-tissue injuries. 5-2.5 Describe the emergency medical care of the patient with a closed soft-tissue injury. 5-2.6 State the types of open soft-tissue injuries.

  3. Cognitive Objectives(2 of 6) 5-2.7 Describe the emergency medical care of the patient with an open soft-tissue injury. 5-2.8 Discuss the emergency medical care considerations for a patient with a penetrating chest injury. 5-2.9 State the emergency medical care considerations for a patient with an open wound to the abdomen. 5-2.10 Differentiate the care of an open wound to the chest from an open wound to the abdomen.

  4. Cognitive Objectives(3 of 6) 5-2.11 List the classification of burns. 5-2.12 Define superficial burn. 5-2.13 List the characteristics of a superficial burn. 5-2.14 Define partial-thickness burn. 5-2.15 List the characteristics of a partial-thickness burn. 5-2.16 Define full-thickness burn.

  5. Cognitive Objectives(4 of 6) 5-2.17 List the characteristics of a full-thickness burn. 5-2.18 Describe the emergency medical care of the patient with a superficial burn. 5-2.19 Describe the emergency medical care of the patient with a partial-thickness burn. 5-2.20 Describe the emergency medical care of the patient with a full-thickness burn. 5-2.21 List the functions of dressing and bandaging. 5-2.22 Describe the purpose of a bandage.

  6. Cognitive Objectives(5 of 6) 5-2.23 Describe the steps in applying a pressure bandage. 5-2.24 Establish the relationship between airway management and the patient with chest injury, burns, and blunt and penetrating injuries. 5-2.25 Describe the effects of improperly applied dressings, splints, and tourniquets. 5-2.26 Describe the emergency medical care of a patient with an impaled object.

  7. Cognitive Objectives(6 of 6) 5-2.27 Describe the emergency medical care of a patient with an amputation. 5-2.28 Describe the emergency care for a chemical burn. 5-2.29 Describe the emergency care for an electrical burn. • There are no affective objectives for this chapter.

  8. Psychomotor Objectives (1 of 3) 5-2.29 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of closed soft-tissue injuries. 5-2.30 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of open soft-tissue injuries. 5-2.31 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with an open chest wound. 5-2.32 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with open abdominal wounds.

  9. Psychomotor Objectives (2 of 3) 5-2.33 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with an impaled object. 5-2.34 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with an amputation. 5-2.35 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of an amputated part. 5-2.36 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with superficial burns. 5-2.37 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with partial-thickness burns.

  10. Psychomotor Objectives (3 of 3) 5-2.38 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with full-thickness burns. 5-2.39 Demonstrate the steps in the emergency medical care of a patient with a chemical burn. 5-2.40 Demonstrate completing a prehospital care report for patients with soft-tissue injuries.

  11. Anatomy of the Skin

  12. Function of the Skin • Protection • Sensation • Temperature control

  13. Soft-Tissue Injuries • Closed injuries • Soft-tissue damage beneath the skin • Open injuries • Break in the surface of the skin • Burns • Soft tissue receives more energy than it can absorb

  14. Contusion • Results from blunt force striking the body

  15. Hematoma • Pool of blood that has collected in the body

  16. Crushing Injury • Occurs when a great amount of force is applied to the body

  17. Scene Size-up • Observe for hazards. • Take BSI precautions. • Place several pairs of gloves in pocket. • You may be able to identify bleeding before even reaching patient. • Look for indicators of MOI.

  18. Initial Assessment (1 of 2) • Observe patient for seriousness of condition. • Does patient have any apparent life threats? • Look for hidden injuries. • Ensure patent airway. • Protect patient from further spinal injury. • Quickly assess breathing. • Palpate chest wall for DCAP-BTLS.

  19. Initial Assessment (2 of 2) • If soft-tissue injury is discovered on chest or abdomen: • Check for clear and symmetrical breath sounds. • Provide high-flow oxygen or assisted ventilations. • Quickly assess pulse rate and quality. • Closed soft-tissue injuries do not have visible signs of bleeding. • Pulse will indicate how aggressively you need to treat for shock.

  20. Transport Decision • If patient has signs of shock or airway or breathing problem, consider quickly transporting or requesting ALS. • Do not delay transport of closed-injury patient who may have more serious deeper injury.

  21. Focused History and Physical Exam • Patients with significant MOI may need a rapid physical exam to identify injuries. • Focused physical exam • Focus assessment on the isolated closed injury, complaint, and affected body region. • Rapid physical exam • Perform if significant trauma has likely affected multiple systems. • Make sure cervical collar is applied.

  22. Baseline Vital Signs • Closed-injury patients may rapidly become unstable. • Look for tachycardia; tachypnea; low blood pressure; weak pulse; and cool, moist skin. • Soft-tissue injuries, even without a significant MOI, can cause shock.

  23. SAMPLE History • Obtain from responsive patient or bystanders/family. • Look for medical ID jewelry or cards.

  24. Interventions • Provide complete spinal immobilization early if spinal injuries are suspected. • Provide high-flow oxygen. • Treat aggressively for shock. • Request ALS if necessary. • Do not delay transport.

  25. Detailed Physical Exam • Any time there is a significant MOI, perform detailed physical exam if time permits.

  26. Ongoing Assessment • Repeat the initial assessment. • Reassess vital signs frequently. • Communication and documentation • Provide accurate account of how you treated injuries.

  27. RICES • Rest—keep patient quiet and comfortable as possible. • Ice slows bleeding. • Compression over an injury slows bleeding. • Elevation above the level of the heart reduces swelling. • Splinting decreases bleeding and reduces pain.

  28. Abrasions • Caused by friction

  29. Laceration • Jagged cut

  30. Avulsion • Separation of various layers of the skin

  31. Penetrating Wound • Results from a sharp pointed object

  32. Gunshot Wounds • Gunshot wounds have unique characteristics

  33. Crushing Open Wound • May involve damaged internal organs or broken bones

  34. Scene Size-up • Wear BSI. • Do not touch equipment with bloody gloves; wear several pairs. • Beware of contaminating one patient with another patient’s blood. • Wear eye protection. • Consider MOI.

  35. Initial Assessment • There may be internal underlying injuries. • Injuries can affect airway and breathing. • Provide spinal immobilization. • If the patient has an open chest wound, evaluate for bubbling or sucking sounds. • Quickly place an occlusive dressing over wound. • Provide high-flow oxygen. • Assess pulse and skin for shock. • Control significant bleeding.

  36. Transport Decision • Consider quick transport if patient has airway or breathing problem or significant bleeding. • Stay focused on problems at hand. • Patients with significant bleeding or internal bleeding may quickly become unstable. • Watch for signs of shock.

  37. Focused History and Physical Exam • Focused physical exam • Perform in responsive patient with simple open injury. • Focus on isolated injury, complaint, and affected body region. • Rapid physical exam • Perform if there is significant trauma likely affecting multiple systems. • Look for DCAP-BTLS. • Do not delay transport. • Be sure that spine is stabilized.

  38. Baseline Vital Signs/SAMPLE History • Baseline vital signs • Will help determine if patient is going into shock • SAMPLE history • Anemia and hemophilia • Medications that thin the blood (aspirin, prescribed blood thinners)

  39. Interventions • Control bleeding. • If bleeding is not significant, control later in assessment. • Stabilize spine and assist breathing. • Splint painful, swollen, deformed extremities.

  40. Detailed Physical Exam • Perform if patient is stable and time allows.

  41. Ongoing Assessment • Assess all bandaging frequently. • Reassess ABCs often. • Communication and documentation • Include description of MOI and patient’s position. • Estimate and report amount of blood loss. • Describe location, size, depth of injury.

  42. Emergency Medical Care (1 of 3) • Use proper BSI precautions. • Administer oxygen if needed. • Treatment priority is ABCs—including controlling bleeding.

  43. Emergency Medical Care (2 of 3) • Apply dry, sterile dressing over entire wound. • Maintain pressure and secure dressing with a roller bandage.

  44. Emergency Medical Care (3 of 3) • Leave original dressing in place if bleeding continues. • Apply a second dressing on top of first and secure. • Splint the extremity.

  45. Abdominal Wounds • Open wound in abdomen may expose organs. • Organ protruding through abdomen is called an evisceration.

  46. Abdominal Wound Management • Do not touch exposed organs. • Cover organs with a moist sterile dressing. • Transport immediately.

  47. Impaled Objects (1 of 2) • Do not attempt to move or remove object.

  48. Impaled Objects (2 of 2) • Control bleeding and stabilize object. • Tape a rigid item over object to prevent movement. • Transport to hospital carefully.

  49. Amputations • Immobilize partial amputation with bulky dressings and splint. • Wrap complete amputation in dry sterile dressing and place in plastic bag. • Put bag in cool container filled with ice. Do not let object freeze! • Transport severed part with patient.

  50. Neck Injuries (1 of 2) • An open neck injury can be life threatening. • Air can get into the veins and cause an air embolism.

More Related