ED Thoracotomy

It’s a new academic year and we are going to start off with some trauma! Today, we are going to talk about ED thoracotomy. It’s basically surgery but in the ED.

First of all, What is ED thoracotomy? It is a Hail Mary attempt in patients with penetrating chest injuries with signs of life in the field and suffer a subsequent witnessed cardiac arrest to open the chest and temporize a life threatening wound. It can be used to relieve cardiac tamponade, control hilar bleeding, cross clamp the descending aorta, or repair a myocardial laceration, all while on the way to the OR for definitive repair.

Success rate and survival is very poor for patients when thoracotomy is performed for blunt trauma, about 2% survival for patients in shock and less than 1% for patients with no vital signs. Conversely, in penetrating wounds, while still poor, 15% of all patients survived.

Guidelines have been established, the so called East and West guidelines, to help balance the already poor odds of survival with the risks of exposing health care providers to blood borne pathogens and salvaging patients with high odds of anoxic brain injury.

Western Trauma Association guidelines: consider ED thoracotomy in patients arriving with blunt trauma and < 10 minutes of CPR or penetrating trauma and < 15 minutes of CPR.

Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma: strongest recommendation to perform ED thoracotomy in patients with initial signs of life after penetrating thoracic injury who now present pulseless.

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Other commonly quoted numbers. Also consider thoracotomy when you have unresponsive hypotension SBP < 70 despite aggressive resuscitation, chest tube output > 1500cc’s of blood within 24 hours, or when there is > 200/250 cc/hr output of blood after tube thoracostomy for 2-4 consecutive hours.

What you need: A well-staffed and properly trained team that includes also includes a trauma surgeon. Lots of PPE. Thoracotomy tray (rib spreader, #10 or #21 scalpel, scissors, foreceps, vascular clamps, curved artery forceps, needle driver, internal defibrillation paddles, skin stapler, sutures). I would also add a foley catheter as it can be inserted into the heart and the balloon inflated to stabilize a laceration while sutures are being placed.

How is it done? These are the basic steps. Secure the airway and insert an NGT, it can help distinguish the aorta which lies posterior to esophagus. Then, start with a L sided approach, place a chest tube on the R side concurrently. Incise from the sternum to the posterior axillary line at the 4/5th intercostal space, cutting through skin/soft tissue and muscle in one go. Spread the ribs with the rachet bar down. Pick up the pericardium and open it. Inspect myocardium for lacerations. Cardiac massage, internal defibrillation, and intracardiac epinephrine can be done. The aorta can be cross clamped for up to 30 minutes if hypotension still persists. If no evidence of L sided injury, extend to the R side (clam shell).

 

Hope this helps next time you get a note about a stab or GSW, active CPR, 3 minutes out!

Sources

https://emcrit.org/emcrit/procedure-of-thoracotomy/

https://i0.wp.com/emcrit.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/CJLDP_bW8AAVQ2o.png-large.png

https://westerntrauma.org/documents/PublishedAlgorithms/WTACriticalDecisionsResuscitativeThoracotomy.pdf

https://www.east.org/education/practice-management-guidelines/emergency-department-thoracotomy

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/fullarticle/391389

https://wikem.org/wiki/Thoracotomy

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Metacarpal Fractures

Trauma Tuesday!Metacarpal Fractures

mcp fractures.png


Why do we care so much about a few small bones in the hand? Because missed injuries can lead to permanent disabilities--we (as well as our patients) need our hands for pretty much everything.

How to assess for these injuries? Do your typical hand exam but pay special attention to:

Rotational alignment! Have the patient flex at the MCP and PIP, forming a loose fist with the DIPs extended (as in the figure below, to the left). The axis of each digit should merge near mid wrist. Rotational malalignment will cause deviation of this axis for the injured digit.

mcp fractures 2.png


Rotational malalignment is usually an indication for operative repair, so be sure to check for it. 

Don't forget: Any open wound over the MCP should alert you to the possibility of a "fight bite"--usually require exploration or washout. This needs EMERGENT ortho evaluation. 

Diagnosis

Get X-rays - AP, lateral, and oblique views; pay special attention to the lateral as this is what you will use to measure angulation.

For the quick and dirty: acceptable shaft angulation is 40° for 5th MC, 30° for 4th MC, 20° for 3rd MCP, and 10° for 2nd. Reduce if there is greater angulation. 

Management

NONOPERATIVE: For stable fractures, those without rotational deformities, and those with acceptable angulation and shortening (usually 2-5mm for each shaft) => nonoperative repair: 

Reduce a dorsally angulated neck fracture before splinting, usually done via the Jahss technique. (https://youtu.be/40irKoUJqsM)

For MCP head/neck/shaft fractures, radial or ulnar gutter splint depending on which MCP is injured. For MCP base fractures, wrist splint. 



OPERATIVE: For open fractures, intra-articular fractures, fractures with rotational malalignment, significantly displaced or angulated fractures, or in the event of multiple MCP fractures => operative repair

Err on the side of prompt orthopedic follow up. 







Sources

https://emergencymedicinecases.com/episode-29-hand-emergencies/

https://coreem.net/core/metacarpal-fractures/

https://www.orthobullets.com/hand/6037/metacarpal-fractures

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POTD Trauma Tuesdays: Fish Hook Removal

FISH HOOK REMOVAL

Introduction
▪ Most fishhooks consist of an eyelet at one end, a straight shank, and a curved portion that ends in a barbed point on the inner curve that points away from the hook’s tip. By design, it is constructed to prevent the hook from dislodging once it engages tissue
▪ Fish hooks are most often caught on hands and feet
▪ ED physicians may remove superficially embedded hooks but those embedded in vital structures (eyes, testicles, carotid artery, etc) should be referred to the appropriate surgical specialist covering that organ

How do I prepare to remove it?

▪ Stabilize the hook with a hemostat and remove any attachments, such as lures, fishing lines, sinkers, etc.
▪ Cleanse with betadine
▪ Use local anesthesia
▪ Children may need procedural sedation
▪ Pain control
▪ Tetanus prophylaxis

What methods are used for removal?
▪ Back out technique
⁃ If the hook is barbless, this is the easiest method.
⁃ As the name implies, back the hook out with a hemostat.

▪ Push through technique
⁃ Use when the tip of the hook is near the skin surface.
⁃ Push the hook through until you break the skin, and then use a wire cutter to cut the tip off.
⁃ Then back out the remainder of the hook.

▪ String technique
⁃ Hook’s belly should be directly in front of you with the shank pointing in the opposite direction
⁃ Loop a piece of string or large silk suture (3-0) around the belly of the hook and then wrap the ends around your index finger
⁃ Push down on the shank and eye of the hook with your other hand to disengage the barb from the surrounding tissue
⁃ Pull string slowly until it is taut in the plane of the hook’s long axis
⁃ Keeping it taut, jerk it quickly and firmly in the same direction

▪ Cut it out technique
⁃ When all else fails, cut with a scalpel along the hook, and then blunt dissect down with a hemostat.

Should I give antibiotics?

▪ No trials have investigated antibiotic therapy for fish hook injuries
▪ Most superficial fish hook wounds heal well without sequelae
▪ Consider antibiotics if the fish hook is deeply embedded in an infection-prone area such as a fingertip or ear
▪ Most infections are caused by skin flora
▪ If hook is contaminated (touched sea water, fish, bait, etc), consider abx treatment
⁃ Cephalexin 500mg PO q6 or cefazolin 1g IV q8 or Clinda 300mg PO q6 or 600mg IV q8
⁃ Seawater? ADD Doxycycline 100mg q12
⁃ See recent guidelines for other specific situations

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