Login
Site Search
Trauma-List Subscription

Subscribe

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

Modify

Home > List Archives

Sequencing of complex ortho in major multisystem injury

Bjorn, Pret pbjorn at emh.org
Wed Feb 11 19:30:17 GMT 2009


Adult female, pedestrian vs train.  

Arrives in extremis, shocky.  Looks like she's been hit by a train.  

Injuries will be found to include flail chest with tension pneumothorax
and pulmonary contusion; high-grade splenic injury with active bleeding
and clinically evident hemoperitoneum; a left renal disruption with
retroperitoneal hematoma; stable pelvic rami fractures; and two open,
angulated, mangled extremities with diminished pulses (one arm, one
leg).

Airway control, ED thoracostomy, massive transfusion initiated and taken
promptly to OR for damage-control procedures (splenectomy and packing,
extremity debridement, reapproximations and ex-fixes).  

To ICU post op, recovers nicely over a few hours: warm, no acidosis,
normotensive, predictably anemic and thrombocytopenic but without
coagulopathy.  She is moving all extremities and has a negative brain
CT.  All the surgeons are considering her survival unexpected, and her
stable condition just short of astonishing.  She has good apparent
circulatory, sensory and motor function in her fixators.

The orthopedists are anxious to have a more methodical crack at her arm
and leg: multiple complicated surgeries taking several hours.  

How long should she rest in the ICU before definitive extremity repairs?

Pret Bjorn, RN
Bangor, ME USA




More information about the trauma-list mailing list