Login
Site Search
Subscribe

Subscribe

Would you like to receive list emails batched into one daily digest?
No Yes
Modify

Modify

Home > List Archives

MAST/prehospital interventions - for prehospital providers

Ian Seppelt SeppelI at wahs.nsw.gov.au
Tue Aug 1 07:47:51 BST 2006


Amen.

Cheers, Ian

Ian Seppelt FANZCA FJFICM
Senior Staff Specialist
Dept of Intensive Care Medicine
The Nepean Hospital, PO Box 63 Penrith NSW 2751
Clinical Lecturer, University of Sydney

>>> wgriggs at bigpond.net.au 1/08/2006 3:49pm >>>
Hi Forrest,

My name is Bill Griggs.  I am a medical specialist and the Director of

Trauma at an Australian Major Trauma Centre.  I also spent 15 years
working 
as a road paramedic and a total of over 30 years working for, and with,

Ambulance Services.  I assume from your post and from your website that
you 
are involved in prehospital care?  I am pleased to see prehospital care

providers and other non-medical specialists having the "courage" (a
careful 
and deliberate choice of word given some of the responses that one may
be 
subjected to!) to post questions here.

One of the problems we have as Ambulance Officer/Paramedic/EMTs is that

during our training we tend to be given "facts" which for the most part
we 
have to accept.  The same can be true for medical students.
Unfortunately 
medicine is as much art as it is science.  So, as new data are
uncovered 
sometimes these "facts" change.

So, as a couple of prehospital examples....
- in the past I have used MAST but based on the current data I would
not do 
so again.
- in the past I have given bicarbonate and calcium routinely for
cardiac 
arrest but based on the current data I would not do so again.

I note that, for both of these interventions, I can remember individual

cases where there seemed to be an apparent improvement in a patient's 
condition which was related in time to these interventions.  However
the 
data are very clear, for any identifiable group of patients they are
bad and 
worsen outcome.  It is really important to avoid the "in my experience"

fallacy when there are clear data to guide practice.

Did I hurt people with these (and other) interventions?  Probably.  Do
I 
worry about that? A little.  How do I deal with that?  I try to accept
that 
I was doing what I understood was the best treatment at the time, and
that 
what the best treatment might be, is constantly subject to change.

Am I doing something in my practice now which, in 5 or 10 years time
(or 
sooner), will be shown to be hurting people?  Undoubtedly.  Do I know
which 
bit(s) of my practice that is?  No.  So, I am hurting some people. 
What are 
my options?
(1) quit medicine and take up basket weaving or something else. (No
offence 
intended to any avid basket weavers out there :-))
(2) keep going and try to adapt my practice in the face of new evidence
- 
this means I have to admit to myself that I may be doing things which
are 
bad for my patients.  This is an extremely important admission because
it 
allows me to discard bad practices when they are identified as such,
and not 
cling to them for the sake of "tradition" or because to change would
mean I 
have to admit I was wrong.  I have already admitted I am wrong in
advance!

With regard to you question about hypoperfused patients, one of the
issues 
is that they are many causes of hypoperfusion.  Perhaps not
surprisingly, 
what might be good for one cause may be bad for another. To look at
your 
example of leg raising, a person who is about to faint but who has
normal 
blood volume may benefit from being laid flat and even from having
their 
legs raised.  This should improve perfusion to the brain and possibly 
prevent them fainting.  However, while a person who may be about to
pass out 
from internal blood loss could be laid flat, raising the legs is not
clearly 
of benefit and may actually cause harm.

One theory is when you are bleeding internally, the resulting lowering
of 
your blood pressure and vasoconstriction may both act to slow the rate
of 
ongoing bleeding - presumably a good thing!  If you raise the legs and

"autotransfuse"  the patient you may raise the blood pressure and the
venous 
filling pressures "tricking" the body's pressure and volume receptors
into 
decreasing the amount of vasoconstriction.  In turn these two factors 
(raised BP and decreased vasoconstriction) turn may lead to an increase
in 
the rate of bleeding and a hastening of the patient's death.

Clearly there can be many variables and what actually happens will be 
different from patient to patient.

However there are pretty good data showing that transfusing/ infusing 
patients who have ongoing bleeding without controlling the bleeding is
a bad 
thing.   I can provide references if you like, but a search of Medline
will 
enable you to find articles yourself without having me filter them to 
provide the ones that support my own viewpoint!  You do need to learn
how to 
assess articles and their raw data, to enable you to make your own make

judgements.  This is because, unfortunately, abstracts and conclusions
seem 
too often to be at significant variance from what the actual data may
say! 
But decide for yourself.

One more point which is important for prehospital providers to
understand. 
The best measure of results is patient outcome across a group of
patients. 
However this is not what they are like when we drop them in the ER.  It
is 
whether they get to go home and what their quality of life is long
term. 
Some people will argue that pre-hospital providers can not be
responsible 
for what happens in a hospital and therefore the only end point is
condition 
on arrival at ER.  This argument is just plain wrong.  Just think what
you 
would want if you were the patient?  To have a "good" blood pressure on

arrival at the ER or to be able to go home alive?  They may not be
related 
to each other.  They may, in some cases, even be alternative choices.

Finally, am I a reliable source?  I think so, but maybe not.  I have
tried 
to explain my rationale/reasoning and I have told you my background for

context.   I have told you about data but not shown that data to you,
so my 
words must be treated with a degree of healthy scepticism.  Bottom
line? - 
if you want to know the answer to something, try looking for some real
data 
and critically analyse it yourself - Medline(R) is a good place to
start. 
Failing that, ask others, but ask more than one person from more than
one 
background, and ask them to please explain the rationale for their
views. 
"Coz I say so!" probably doesn't cut it, if you are over 5 years
old....

regards

Bill

Dr William M Griggs AM
Director Trauma Service
Royal Adelaide Hospital
South Australia
wgriggs at bigpond.net.au 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Forrest Robleto" <farcpr at gmail.com>
To: "Trauma &amp, Critical Care mailing list" <trauma-list at trauma.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 01, 2006 11:52 AM
Subject: Re: Cease fire NOW or prehospital needle thoracotomy


I guess I stand corrected.  I got that information from a source I
normally
consider reliable.  It sounded reasonable so I believed it.

Is elevation of the lower extremities useful in hypoperfusion for those
of
us without the ability to introduce fluids?


On 7/31/06, docrickfry at aol.com <docrickfry at aol.com> wrote:
>
> I disagree with this urban legend presented as some sort of
authoritative
> fact--please cite just ONE study showing any benefit whatever to
MAST
> trousers in Vietnam in improving casualty outcomes.  I hope you
realize 
> that
> simply raising a blood pressure reading in no way indicates that
there was
> any benefit whatever?
> ERF
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: farcpr at gmail.com 
> To: trauma-list at trauma.org 
> Sent: Mon, 31 Jul 2006 10:41 AM
> Subject: Re: Cease fire NOW or prehospital needle thoracotomy
>
>
> MAST trousers got pretty good results in Viet Nam with young
otherwise
> healthy men. When applied accross the general population they didn't
fare
> as well.
<snip> 

--
trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG
To change your settings or unsubscribe visit:
http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html

######################################################################
Attention: 
This message is intended for the addresses named and may contain 
confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient, please
delete it and notify the sender. Views expressed in this message are 
those of the individual sender, and are not necessarily the views of 
Sydney West Area Health Service.


This e-mail has been scanned for viruses
######################################################################


More information about the trauma-list mailing list