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Emergency Management of a 14-Year-Old Boy Involved in a Car Accident

Learn about the stages in the management of a sick child involved in a trauma case with a car accident. Understand the emergency signs, priority signs, and necessary treatments for the patient's condition.

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Emergency Management of a 14-Year-Old Boy Involved in a Car Accident

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  1. Chapter 9Common surgical problemsTrauma

  2. Case study: Hamid 14 year old boy wasinvolved in the accident with a car

  3. What are the stages in the management of Hamid?

  4. Stages in the management of a sick child(Ref. Chart 1, p. xxii) • Triage • Emergency treatment, if required • History and examination • Laboratory investigations, if required • Differential diagnoses • Main diagnosis • Treatment • Supportive care • Monitoring • Plan discharge • Follow-up, if required

  5. What emergency (danger) and priority (important) signs have you noticed? Pulse: 148/min, RR: 50/min with intercostal recession and reduced right sided chest movement, BP 85 systolic, capillary refill: 3 seconds

  6. Triage • Emergency signs (Ref. p. 2, 6) • Obstructed breathing • Severe respiratory distress • Central cyanosis • Signs of shock • Coma • Convulsions • Severe dehydration • Priority signs (Ref. p. 6) • Tiny baby • Temperature • Trauma • Pallor • Poisoning • Pain (severe) • Respiratory distress • Restless, irritable, • lethargic • Referral • Malnutrition • Oedema of both feet • Burns

  7. What emergency treatment does Hamid need?

  8. Emergency treatment • Airway management? • Oxygen? • Intravenous fluids? • Anticonvulsants? • Immediate investigations?

  9. Emergency treatment (continued) • □How do you treat respiratory distress? • Give oxygen (Ref. Chart 5, p. 11) • Manage airway* *Neck trauma was excluded by clinical examination and cervical spine x-ray • Make sure child is warm

  10. Emergency treatment (continued) □ How do you treat signs of shock? • Stop any bleeding • Give IV fluids (Ref. Chart 7, p. 13) • Insert an IV line (and draw blood for immediate investigations such as: haemoglobin, cross-match, blood sugar) • Attach Ringer's lactate or normal saline – make sure the infusion is running well • Infuse 20ml/kg as rapidly as possible • Reassess child after appropriate volume has run • Measure the pulse and breathing rate at start and every 5-10 minutes

  11. Emergency treatment (continued) • Insert a wide bore intercostal catheter into right chest (Ref. p. 348) and repeat chest x-ray to see if pneumothorax is drained • Immobilise the left leg (Ref. p. 277)

  12. Give emergency treatment until the patient is stable

  13. History Hamid was the passenger on the back of the motorcycle. The estimated speed was 50 km/h. He was thrown clear of the car and slid along the road for some distance before hitting a building by the side of the road. There was momentary loss of consciousness. He was placed in the back of another motor vehicle and driven to the local hospital. On arrival he was alert but distressed. There was obvious deformity to his left leg. There were abrasions all down his back and left side. He was complaining of pain in the chest and left thigh.

  14. Examination Vital signs: pulse: 148/min, RR: 50/min, BP 85 systolic, capillary refill: 3 seconds Chest: airway patent, no stridor; intercostal recession and reduced right sided chest movement, tender right clavicle Cardiovascular: regular, no apex beat displacement Cervical spine:non tender Abdomen: soft and non tender Back: non tender Limbs: externally rotated left leg, swollen thigh

  15. Differential diagnoses • List possible causes of the illness • Main diagnosis • Secondary diagnoses • Use references to confirm

  16. Possible diagnoses • Concussion • Pneumothorax • Neck trauma • Leg fracture • Pelvis fracture • Internal injuries • Internal bleeding

  17. Further examination based on possible diagnoses • AVPU (Ref. p. 18)  Aalert • V responds to voice • P Responds to pain • Uunconscious • Pupil size and light reaction: normal • Reacts appropriate to speech and questions

  18. What investigations are required?

  19. Investigations • Cervical spine x-ray • Chest x-ray • Pelvis x-ray • Left femur x-ray • Full blood examination: haemoglobin, haematocrit, cross-match

  20. Chest x-ray

  21. Femur

  22. Diagnosis Summary of findings: • Examination: severe respiratory distress, signs of shock, but alert, pupil size and reaction normal • X-Ray shows: • Pneumothorax (right side) • Fractured distal femur (Pelvis normal) • Abrasions • Possible abdominal trauma Multi-trauma

  23. Treatment Give emergency treatment until the patient is stable □ Pneumothorax  Keep the intercostal catheter until the air is drained □ Fractured distal femur  Consider referral for review by a surgeon experienced in paediatric surgery (Ref. p. 275-279) □ Abrasions  Clean the skin and avoid an infection □ Possible abdominal trauma • Observe the child and look for signs of peritonitis (Ref. p. 281-282)

  24. What supportive care and monitoring are required?

  25. Supportive care • Pain control (Ref. p. 306) • In dwelling urinary catheter • Blood transfusion is not necessary in this case as shock resolved with clear fluid and drainage of pneumothorax, and haemoglobin: 9g/dl (Ref. p. 308) • Nutrition when abdominal injury is excluded and Hamid is stable (Ref. p. 302-303)

  26. What monitoring is required?

  27. Monitoring • Nurses should monitor frequently the child's state of: • Consciousness • Pulse • RR • Pupil size • Use a Monitoring chart (Ref. p. 320, 413) • Medical review twice daily • Reassess neurological state (AVPU score) • Re-check haemoglobin • Daily chest x-rays

  28. Monitoring • Monitoring for signs of for each of the injuries: • Improvement • Complications • Failure of treatment • Frequent observations of: • Pulse, SpO2 if available • Chest tube water level swinging • Check sensation, motor power, pulses and capillary return in left leg and foot • Abdominal tenderness

  29. Follow-up • Review of fracture healing • Physiotherapy • - and give simple suggestions to the mother for passive exercises

  30. Summary • Hamid is a 14 year old boy who was involved in a multi-trauma. He sustained a pneumothorax, fractured femur and abrasions. He had mild concussion only. • No abdominal complications occurred.

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