• JEMS · Sep 2012

    Review

    Deadly dozen: dealing with the 12 types of thoracic injuries.

    • Mark Cipolle, Michael Rhodes, and Glen Tinkoff.
    • Christiana Care Health System in Wilmington, Del., USA.
    • JEMS. 2012 Sep 1; 37 (9): 60-5.

    AbstractAlthough most thoracic trauma may be treated non-operatively, major thoracic trauma accounts for 25% of trauma deaths. Except for provision of a definitive airway and/or relief of a tension pneumothorax with a needle decompression, the vast majority of thoracic trauma is best served with "load and go," high-flow oxygen, placement of an IV line and administration of crystalloid solutions as the clinical scenario would indicate. Understanding the mechanism of injury is helpful in establishing both prehospital and in-hospital management priorities. Patients who sustain a single penetrating wound to the chest have the best survivability after a resuscitative thoracotomy. Practicing chest assessment skills is vital to being a good prehospital provider. Ultrasound, NIRS tissue oxygenation and telemedicine will likely become more commonly employed as prehospital monitoring options. PEEP, or "over bagging," may exacerbate a simple or open pneumothorax, converting it to a tension pneumothorax.

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