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Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment Dr. Albert R. Wheeler, MD Medical Director GTNP Medical Director TCSAR

Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

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Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment. Dr. Albert R. Wheeler, MD Medical Director GTNP Medical Director TCSAR. Disclosures. I wish I had some financial affiliation to some of the products that we will talk about...but I don’t. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Trauma Assessment and

Equipment

Wilderness Trauma Assessment and

EquipmentDr. Albert R. Wheeler, MD

Medical Director GTNPMedical Director TCSAR

Dr. Albert R. Wheeler, MDMedical Director GTNPMedical Director TCSAR

Page 2: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Disclosures

• I wish I had some financial affiliation to some of the products that we will talk about...but I don’t.

• I am an active volunteer on TCSAR and Medical Director of GTNP EMS

Page 3: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Objectives

• To understand Wilderness Medicine Decision Making in Trauma.

• And why it is important to front country EMS

• To review techniques and equipment useful in the wilderness setting.

Page 4: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Medicine Training

• This talk is NOT a comprehensive review of delivering Wilderness Trauma Care

• There are many companies providing courses in this

• WMA, WMI, NOLS, SOLO, etc...

• WALS, WEMT, WFR

Page 5: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

What is Wilderness?

• An evolving definition in regards to EMS and Medicine

• Backcountry

• Sidecountry

• Urban Areas?

Page 6: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

How does Wilderness Differ from Everyday

• Extreme Environmental Conditions

• Little or no Resources

• May require technical extrication

• May require covering long distances without motorized assistance

Page 7: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Definition of Wilderness Medicine

• The practice of resource-limited medicine in austere environments.(SAEM Website)

Page 8: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Examples

Page 9: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Airway Assessment and

Management

• 35 y/o Male biker injured after going off of a jump.

• Was Helmeted but Helmet is fractured.

• GCS 6 (E = 1, V = 2, M = 3)

Page 10: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

How Would you care for this patient Here?

Page 11: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

How about Here?

Page 12: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

And Here???

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Page 13: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Airway Considerations

• Benefit Vs. Risk of Elevated ICP

• Patient’s GCS/Resp. Rate

• Distance of Extrication

• Oxygen Requirement

• Need to “Bag” the patient

• Technical Aspects of Extrication

Page 14: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Airway Management Options

• Endotracheal Tube

• Supraglottic Airway

• Oral Airway

• Nu Mask/BVM

• Nasal Airway

Page 15: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Laryngoscope

• Traditional Larygoscope:

• Heavy

• Battery Hog

• Bulbs burn out

• TruLite

• Disposable with Metal Blade

• Uses LED light

• Long Battery Life

• Weighs 4.2 oz

Page 16: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Digital Intubation

Page 17: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

King LTD Airway

• Disposable Supraglottic Airway

• Easy to Insert with little head movement

• Less Laryngeal Stimulation

• As Secure as ETT but not definitive airway

• Less complicated than Combitube

Page 18: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

NuMask (IOM)• Intra-oral Mask

• Rescue Applications

• Small

• Ventilate in any position

• Single Provider Ventilation

• Avoids problems with “facial seal”

Page 19: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Airway Improvisation

Page 20: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Improvised Cric

Page 21: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Alternative Cric

Page 22: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Breathing Assessment and

Management

• Eco Challenge 2000 Borneo

• Racer crashes on bike leg of race

• Impaled on tree branch

• Semiconscious in respiratory distress

Page 23: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

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Page 24: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Breathing Considerations

• Assessment of Breathing can be difficult in windy or cold environments

• A stethoscope is not always necessary as a tactile assessment can and should be preformed.

• Supporting Breathing over long extrication with a BVM can be problematic

• Providing oxygen support over long durations typically requires lots of supplies (O2 bottles)

• May need to carry specific supplies for procedures.

Page 25: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Breathing Assessment and management

• Hypoxia

• Flail Chest

• Pneumothorax

• Tension Pneumothorax

Page 26: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Oxygen

• Standard D Cylinder

• 425 Liters

• 5lbs

• Carbon Fiber DD Cylinder

• 717 Liters @ 3000psi (533 Liters @ 2000psi)

• 3.7lbs

Page 27: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Oxymizer

• An Oxygen conserving device

• Offers up to 4:1 Oxygen Savings

• Can Extend the Duration of Oxygen Cylinder

• CHAD Therapeutics

Page 28: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Extended Duration

Page 29: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Flail Chest

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Page 30: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Cyclone BVM

• Disposable Single Pt. Use BVM

• Vacuum sealed for low profile

• Oxygen flows into mask

• Manufactured by North American Rescue, LLC

Page 31: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Pneumothorax

• Open Pneumothorax

• Occlusive Dressing on 3 Sides

• Pre-Packaged Chest Seal Products

• Tension Pneumothorax

• Needle Decompression

• Cook Ptx Kit

• NAR ARS Needle

Page 32: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Open Pneumothorax

• Traditional Treatment is 3 sided occlusive dressing

• Do you carry the supplies for this?

• Time consuming to produce

Page 33: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Asherman Chest Seal

• One Way Valve

• Adhesive allows application even over chest hair

• Quick and Time saving

Page 34: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Bolin Chest Seal

• Triple Valve Design

• Jell-Based Adhesive

• Can be removed and replaced

Page 35: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Needle Thoracostomy

• What do you carry for Needle Thoracotomy?

• Needle Thoracostomy: Implications of Computed Tomography Chest Wall Thickness:ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2004; 11:211–213.

• Results: The mean chest wall thickness in the patients studied averaged 4.24 cm (95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.97 to 4.52). Nearly one fourth (25) of the study patients had a chest wall thicker than 5 cm. Women, on average, have thicker chest walls than men (4.90 for women; 4.16 for men; p = 0.022).Conclusions: In this study, a catheter length of 5 cm would reliably penetrate the pleural space of only 75% of patients. A longer catheter should be considered, especially in women.

Page 36: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Thoracostomy Kits

• Needle Thoracostomy Kits

• Longer Needles

• Cook Kit

• Comes with Valve

• 15g X 6cm Needle

• NAR = 14g X 3.25in (7cm) Needle

Page 37: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Improvised Flutter Valve

Page 38: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Circulation Assessment and

Management

• 20 something “Extreme Skier”

• Falls out of bounds and hits head on rock.

• Bleeding profusely from scalp!!!

• Buddies call for help. Say he is pale and “Really bleeding...Dude”.

Page 39: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

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Page 40: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

How do we evaluate SHOCK and Bleeding in the Wilderness

• SHOCK

• A clinical Diagnosis Not Dependent on Blood Pressure

• Check Pulses (peripheral Vs. Central)

• Blood Sweep to identify sites of bleeding

Page 41: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Bleeding in the Wilderness

• Major Advances because of Trauma care of wounded soldiers

• “traditional measures”

• Tourniquets

• Hemostatic Agents

• Vascular Access

Page 42: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Direct Pressure

• Pinpoint Pressure

• What about pressure bandages?

• Pressure Points

• Pressure = F/A

Page 43: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Tourniquets

• Tourniquets are Good!

• If applied Correctly and in the right situations.

Doyel et al, PREHOSPITAL EMERGENCY CARE 2008;12:241–256

Page 44: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Tourniquet Use Cont.

Doyel et al, PREHOSPITAL EMERGENCY CARE 2008;12:241–256

Doyel et al, PREHOSPITAL EMERGENCY CARE 2008;12:241–256

Page 45: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Hemostatic agents

Page 46: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Vascular Access

• IV

• Hard to obtain in wrong environment

• Affected by Vascular Volume (i.e. Shock)

• IO

• Quick

• Reliable

• Relatively Painless?

Page 47: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

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Page 48: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

IO Devices

• Handheld Needle

• Can be unstable

• More difficult to place (except in infants)

• EZ IO

• Used by military

• Long Battery Life

• Easy to place in adults and Children

• BIG Device

• “Bone Injection Gun”

• Automatic and Spring loaded

• Separate Pediatric and Adult “guns”

Page 49: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Fluid Administration

• What is the GOAL of fluid therapy

• Normal Vitals (blood pressure?)

• Improved Vitals (blood pressure?)

• Improved Clinical Picture?

• Do we have different goals in Trauma?

• Potential Problems with Wilderness IVF

• Keeping fluid warm and unfrozen

• Solution???

Page 50: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Fluid Warmers

Page 51: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Wilderness Evaluation and Assessment of Deficit and Exposure

• Immobilization can greatly increase time of extrication from wilderness

• When appropriate clearing the C-spine should be done using approved protocols

• Exposure of patients in the Wilderness is potentially harmful because of the environment

• Minimize exposure

• Insulate and Warm patient as much as possible

• Hypothermia is Deadly in Trauma

=

Page 52: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Summary

• You may not go to the Wilderness But the wilderness may come to you...prepare for it

• Good BLS care often is all that is required - Appropriate Direct Pressure

• Appropriate specialized equipment can be very useful but sometime you will have to improvise... Be creative.

Page 53: Wilderness Trauma Assessment and Equipment

Final Thought

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