Unstable Pelvic Ring Fractures

The pelvic ring consists of the sacrum and two innominate bones, which are made up of the pubis, ilium, and ischium. These bones are held together by strong ligaments to give the pelvis stability.

A pelvic ring fracture is a severe fracture with 2 breaks in the circular ring, leading to an unstable pelvis and a potentially unstable patient. Fractures that disrupt the pelvic ring predispose patients to bleeding given the large network of arterial and venous anastomoses. Patients who have an isolated pelvic fracture and are hypotensive carry a mortality of 15-40%. Most vascular injuries in the pelvis are venous (90%). While rare, arterial bleeds (10%) should be suspected when a pelvic binder is placed but the patient remains hemodynamically unstable. The retroperitoneal space can accumulate 4 liters of blood before venous tamponade occurs. Pelvic binders are useful in that they can help tamponade bleeding veins, decrease total pelvic volume, and prevent the shifting of bony fragments.

Other unstable pelvic fractures include lateral compression fractures, "open book" pelvic fractures, and vertical shear fractures. Lateral compression fractures occur when a lateral force vector (t-bone in an MVC) causes an anterior ring disruption and sacral fracture.

“Open book” fractures occur as a result of anteroposterior compression injury to the pelvis, commonly caused by high-speed trauma or elderly falls. There is a disruption to the pubic symphysis and the pelvis opens like a book. Diastasis of > 1 cm (blue arrow) can indicate instability. Disruption of the pubic symphysis, one of the strongest ligamentous structures in the human body, requires a lot of force and should be a red flag to look for other injuries to the head, spine, chest, or abdomen.

Vertical shear pelvic fractures are seen when one-half of the pelvis shifts upward as a result of a fracture of ipsilateral anterior and posterior pelvic ring fractures. They typically occur as a result of high-energy force applied in the axial direction (aka from the gas pedal to the femur and up to the pelvis). Patients may have an unstable pelvis and leg length discrepancy.

For all unstable fractures, you should appropriately resuscitate and stabilize the patient. Give blood as needed but avoid transfusing through lower limb access because it may drain into the retroperitoneal space. If there is a pelvic ring fracture, consider binding the pelvis. Your binder should lay over the greater trochanters and have enough force to close the pelvic ring (video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWLBZKeWEkg).


Galea Lacerations

Anatomy:

 The galea is a dense white layer that covers the periosteum of the skull. It serves as an insertion point for the frontalis and occipitalis muscles

 

Five layers of the scalp

·      SCALP

o   Skin

o   Dense Connective tissue

o   Aponeurosis (galea)

o   Loose connective tissue

o   Periosteum

 

Dense connective tissue layer is richly vascularized. The tight adhesion of these vessels to the connective tissue inhibits effective vasoconstriction, hence the large amount of bleeding in scalp lacerations.

 

The loose connective tissue layer = the DANGER ZONE when lacerated. This layer contains the emissary veins, which connect with the intracranial venous sinuses. Lacerations at this layer are high risk for spreading infection to the meninges!

 

Approach:

·      Examine the wound, clear of debris, and assess the depth of the wound.

o   Superficial wounds generally don’t gape

o   Deep wounds gape widely due to laceration of aponeurosis, and the tension from the frontalis muscle and occipitalis muscle pull the wound open in opposite directions

·      Hair removal unnecessary unless it interferes with actual closure or knot tying. No increased risk of infection if you do not remove the hair. Shaving head increases risk for infection!

·      Obtain hemostasis with pressure and lidocaine with epinephrine.

·      If the galea is lacerated more than 0.5 cm it should be repaired with 3-0 or 4-0 absorbable sutures. to prevent a serious cosmetic deformity from developing.

·      Skin can be repaired using staples; interrupted, mattress, or running sutures, such as 3-0 or 4-0 nylon sutures; or the hair apposition technique. Removal of sutures or staples in 14 days.

·      Antibiotics - With open skull fractures (blunt or penetrating), should give antibiotics: Ceftriaxone 2 grams q12hr + vancomycin for 24 hours.

 

Complications:

·      Asymmetric contraction of the frontalis muscle

·      Osteomyelitis, brain abscess - Failure to repair can also allow bacteria to get to the loose connective tissue layer more easily between the galea and periosteum, leading to increased risk of infection

·      Subgaleal hematoma

 

References:

https://sjrhem.ca/rcp-scalp-lacerations-you-can-leave-your-hat-on/

http://pemsource.org/2019/01/01/question-trauma-10/

https://aneskey.com/special-anatomic-sites/

https://www.aafp.org/afp/2017/0515/p628.html

https://www.vumc.org/trauma-and-scc/sites/default/files/public_files/Protocols/Antibiotics%20in%20CranioFacial%20Trauma%202021.pdf

Tintinallis Emergency Medicine a Comprehensive Study Guide 8th Edition

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Nasal Septal Hematoma

Anatomy:

·      The vascular supply to the septal cartilage is provided through the perichondrium.

·      A hematoma lifts the perichondrium, disrupting blood supply to the cartilage.

Signs and Symptoms:

·      Discolored lateral bulging discolored.

·      Nasal septal hematoma appears as blue, boggy swelling.

·      Pediatrics can present with nasal obstruction, pain, rhinorrhea, and fever.

 

Procedure:

·      If hematoma is small, can use a needle to attempt to aspirate clot. If failing or larger hematoma then place patient in “sniffing position,” and do rhinoscopy with a nasal speculum, light source, suction, irrigation, and packing materials.

·      Anesthetize the nasal mucosa by placing three cotton pledgets soaked in a 1:1 mixture of 4% lidocaine solution for 5 minutes, followed by infiltrative anesthesia if required.

·      Make a small horizontal incision superficially through the mucosa. Do not incise the cartilaginous septum.

·      Evacuate the clot with suction or with forceps.

·      Place bilateral anterior nasal packing coated in topical antibiotic ointment to prevent reaccumulating of the clot and keep the septum midline.

·      Discharge with 24-hour ENT of ED follow-up.

·      Consider prophylactic antibiotics (cover for staph aureus, H. flu, strep pneumo (Amoxicillin-clavulanate)) for patients with packing in place, but not completely necessary if the packing will be removed in 24 to 36 hours.

·      Bilateral hematomas can be drained in the OR

Complications:

·      Permanent thickening of the septum

·      Partial airway obstruction of the nasal passage

·      Necrosis and subsequent erosion of the septum, resulting in communication between the nasal passageways

·      Secondary infection

·      Seroma or Abscess

·      Septal erosion leading to a saddle-nose deformity

 

Procedure Video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5xzYyxgQ0g

 

TLDR:

·      Examine the nasal septum in your trauma patients

·      Anesthetize, incise, evacuate clot

·      Prevent reformation with nasal tampon or packing

·      Consider antibiotics

·      Follow up ENT

·      Serious complications if missed

 

References:

https://www.aafp.org/afp/2004/1001/p1315.html

https://accessemergencymedicine.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?bookid=683&sectionid=45343819#57718045

Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine a Comprehensive Study Guide 8th Edition

https://wikem.org/wiki/Nasal_septal_hematoma

 

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