Critical Care Considerations in Trauma - Overview, Trauma Systems, Initial Assessment PDF
Critical Care Considerations in Trauma - Overview, Trauma Systems, Initial Assessment PDF
OVERVIEW
Overview
Trauma has been dubbed the forgotten epidemic and the neglected disease of modern society.
Trauma annually impacts hundreds of thousands of individuals and costs billions of dollars in direct
expenditures and indirect losses. Trauma care has improved over the past 20 years, largely from
improvements in trauma systems, assessment, triage, resuscitation, and emergency care.
However, an Institute of Medicine report identified a US crisis in access and distribution to emergency
care that may impact trauma system efficiency and effectiveness. Similarly, a predicted deficit in
critical care practitioners may similarly degrade the post-emergency department care of the critically
injured patient. The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS-COT) and the
American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) acute care surgery initiative is designed to
integrate trauma, emergency general surgery, and surgical critical care and to bolster new trainee
interest in this field. Its sensitivity for identifying major trauma patients is lower and specificity higher
than previously described, particularly among elders. [1]
Work must still be done to continuously improve trauma care nationally, regionally, and institutionally,
and the ACS-COT applies rigorous standards to performance improvement prior to verifying US
trauma centers. For this improvement to occur, the ongoing application of the unique principles and
practice of intensive care medicine is necessary.
Trauma Systems
Patient outcomes after major trauma have improved in regions where comprehensive trauma systems
have evolved. Crucial components of such a system should include a coordinated approach to both
prehospital care and hospital care and to training providers in both areas. Paramedics and medical
staff should be provided with a clear and objective framework for assessing patients, establishing and
engaging treatment protocols, following triage guidelines, engaging in transportation and
communication protocols, and implementing ongoing performance improvement programs. It is
essential to recognize that care of the significantly injured patient is critical care in that critical care is a
concept, not a location.
Triage
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The most seriously injured patients must be identified in the field and safely transported to a
designated trauma center where appropriate care is immediately available. This is the principle of
triage and is subject to both under-triage and over-triage. Clearly, from a patient-centered view, over-
triage is preferable, but, from a system perspective, over-triage may be problematic in an overcrowded
and oversubscribed emergency department.
Trauma scoring
Trauma scoring systems describe injury severity and correlate with survival probability. Various
systems facilitate the prediction of patient outcomes and the evaluation of aspects of care. The scoring
systems vary widely, with some relying on physiologic scores (eg, Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] score,
Revised Trauma Score), and others relying on descriptors of anatomic injury (eg, Abbreviated Injury
Score, Injury Severity Score). No universally accepted scoring system has been developed, and each
system contains unique limitations. This limitation has resulted in the use of a number of such systems
in different centers around the world.
Initial Assessment
Assessment principles
Principles involved in the initial assessment of a patient with major trauma are those outlined by the
American College of Surgeons (ACS) in their Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) guidelines or
those of the Australasian College of Surgeons in the Early Management of Severe Trauma guidelines.
[2, 3] The principles involved consist of (1) preparation and transport; (2) primary survey and
resuscitation, including monitoring, urinary and nasogastric tube insertion, and radiography; (3)
secondary survey, including special investigations, such as CT scanning or angiography; (4) ongoing
reevaluation; and (5) definitive care.
Trauma-receiving hospitals should receive advance communication from emergency medical services
care providers about the impending arrival of seriously injured patients. The patient's mechanism of
injury, vital signs, field interventions, and overall status should be communicated. This allows for the in-
house trauma team to be called and for the emergency department staff to make appropriate
preparations.
The trauma team members vary based on world geography but incorporate many similar elements,
including representation from emergency medicine, trauma, critical care, with or without anesthesia,
nursing, respiratory therapy, blood bank, radiology, social services, and registration. A team leader is
identified, and it is the team leader's responsibility to ensure that the resuscitation proceeds in an
organized and efficient manner through the diagnostic and therapeutic protocols. [4] Additional
consultants may be engaged in response to specific injuries. In addition to this team, many trauma
centers also have a trauma care coordinator (usually a nurse), who follows the patient through his or
her hospital course.
On the patient's arrival, a concise transfer of the patient from the paramedics should occur. One
person should be talking, while everyone else is listening; this is crucial information for the whole
team. In many trauma centers, the team leader is a senior or chief resident in surgery or emergency
medicine, with close supervision from appropriate attending staff. Increasingly, mid-level practitioners
(eg, physician associates, nurse practitioners) may serve in this role as well.
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Most trauma centers use a system of prehospital triage that characterizes patients into those with
physiologic derangements and those who have a suggestive mechanism of injury. Those patients with
obvious derangements should prompt a full team response, while patients with less injury may be
cared for by a modified team complement.
Primary survey
The primary survey aims to identify and treat immediately life-threatening injuries relying on the
ABCDE system. This system comprises airway control with stabilization of the cervical spine,
breathing (work and efficacy), circulation including the control of external hemorrhage, disability or
neurologic status, and exposure or undressing of the patient while also protecting the patient from
hypothermia. These elements are explored below.
Airway assessment should proceed while maintaining the cervical spine in a neutral position. The
latter is achieved by using a rigid cervical immobilization collar. Airway clearance maneuvers are
extensively described elsewhere and are not reviewed in this article.
When the airway is in jeopardy, or when the GCS score is less than 8, an artificial airway is essential.
Airway control is commonly achieved by means of rapid-sequence orotracheal intubation (OETT)
performed with in-line stabilization of the cervical spine. Correct placement of the endotracheal tube is
confirmed (1) by the aid of an end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring device, (2) by observation of the
tube passing through the vocal cords, and (3) by auscultation of the chest.
Several well-defined options for achieving airway control must be established in the event that OETT
placement is not able to be achieved. These options include laryngeal mask airway (LMA), intubating
LMA, fiberoptic intubation, percutaneous cricothyroidotomy, and surgical cricothyroidotomy
(tracheostomy in children). Tracheal inspection is essential to determine if there is peritracheal crepitus
or deviation from the midline indicating potential direct airway injury or intrathoracic pulmonary or
major vascular injury.
Breathing
One must next assess the adequacy of gas exchange. This is most readily accomplished by visual
inspection of thoracic cage movement, palpation of the thoracic cage movement, and auscultation of
gas entry. One is assessing for inequalities from one side to the other, crepitus, and local movement
asymmetry as in paradoxic thoracic cage movement in flail chest. One is also evaluating for signs of
impending respiratory failure, such as uncoordinated thoracic cage and abdominal wall movement,
accessory muscle use, and stridor.
Emergent treatment of patients with exsanguinating hemorrhage or shock can be life-saving. This
assessment includes identifying and managing rapid external hemorrhage. This can often be achieved
with a simple pressure dressing, but surgical intervention may be required. As more experience is
gained with procoagulant dressings (used principally by the military), external hemorrhage control may
gain pharmacologic support embedded in dressings.
Shock in trauma patients, defined as inadequate organ perfusion and tissue oxygenation, is most
commonly caused by hemorrhage leading to hypovolemia, but many other causes are readily
identified, including cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax or hemothorax, and spinal cord injury.
Signs of shock include tachypnea, tachycardia, decreased pulse pressure, hypotension, pallor,
delayed capillary refill, oliguria, and a depressed level of consciousness. In patients with hypovolemia,
the neck veins may be flat. A normal mental status generally implies an adequate cerebral perfusion
pressure, while diminished mentation may be associated with shock with or without intracranial
trauma.
ATLS readily identifies 4 different classes of shock. Class I and II shock generally does not need red
cell mass restoration and is well managed with asanguineous fluids for plasma volume expansion.
Hypotension and disordered mentation generally indicate at least class III shock and should prompt
plasma volume expansion and red cell mass repletion if the hypotension fails to resolve after an initial
2000-cc crystalloid bolus, according to ATLS.
A systematic approach for detecting the source of hypovolemic shock should consider 5 sources of
ongoing hemorrhage, as follows: (1) external (eg, from the scalp, skin, or nose), (2) pleural cavities, (3)
peritoneal cavity, (4) pelvis/retroperitoneum, and (5) long-bone fracture. Fracture alignment and
stabilization is essential in limiting blood loss. Pelvic fractures may be initially stabilized with a pelvic
binder or a wrapped sheet secured with a towel clip as a means of reducing pelvic volume to limit
hemorrhage.
Disability
During the acute resuscitation period, a brief assessment of neurologic status should be performed.
This assessment should include the patient's posture (ie, any asymmetry, decerebrate or decorticate
posturing), pupil asymmetry, pupillary response to light, and a global assessment of patient
responsiveness.
A recommended system is the AVPU method, as follows: A = Patient is awake, alert, and appropriate;
V = Patient responds to voice; P = Patient responds to pain; U = Patient is unresponsive.
A complementary assessment using the GCS should be made at this time, during the secondary
survey, and at any time that the patient’s mental status appears to change. A more detailed
assessment of the patient’s neurologic status is to be made during the secondary survey.
Exposure
Patients should be completely disrobed during the initial assessment and the subsequent secondary
survey. This helps ensure that significant injuries are not missed. At the same time, efforts to prevent
significant hypothermia, using a warm ambient room (28-30°C), overhead heating, and warmed IV
fluids, should be instituted. The patient's temperature should be measured on arrival at the emergency
department, and strenuous efforts should be made to avoid significant hypothermia during
resuscitation and therapeutic intervention.
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Ancillary monitors
Urinary drainage catheters are commonly placed to assess for genitourinary system hemorrhage and
to monitor urine flow. Precautions to avoid urethral injury should be taken for patients with pelvic
trauma and for those who have blood at the urethral meatus. Digital rectal examination to identify a
high-riding prostate should precede catheter insertion. Abnormal findings from the rectal examination
or concern as to the continuity of the urethra should prompt a retrograde urethrocystogram to identify a
urethral injury. If identified, a suprapubic catheter should be inserted, and a urologist should be
consulted.
Gastric drainage tubes should be orally inserted into all major trauma patients requiring endotracheal
intubation. Even in the absence of brain injury, oral gastric tube insertion is preferred to decrease the
likelihood of sinusitis from drainage pathway obstruction. Children, in particular, are prone to gastric
dilatation, which can significantly impair their respiration and lead to hemodynamic compromise.
Immediate decompression may be life-saving. Ongoing monitoring of pulse rate, blood pressure,
respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, and temperature is a standard of care in the US.
Radiology
Initial imaging in the resuscitation room should be limited to a portable anteroposterior (AP) chest
radiograph plus an AP pelvic image if the patient was involved in a high-speed motor vehicle collision
or a fall from a height. Prior recommendations for lateral cervical radiography have been supplanted
by routine pan-cervical imaging with image reformation using CT scanning, especially if the patient will
undergo a brain CT scan.
Definitive clearing of the neck is managed in different ways in different institutions, but certain common
features are identified. Patients with a clear sensorium and no distracting injuries may be clinically
cleared if there is no neck pain on palpation and active flexion/extension/rotation.
Patients with a normal CT scan but an abnormal mental status should remain in a rigid cervical
immobilization device until they may participate in a physical examination or they undergo early (< 72
h postinjury) MRI to detect the presence of ligamentous injury. Large datasets have reported that in
more than 20% of patients, injuries were identified on MRI that were not seen on high-resolution CT.
However, few of the additional injuries identified with MRI were clinically significant and a small
number led to additional surgical procedures. [5, 6]
Chest radiographs should be assessed for the position of tubes and lines, the presence of treatable
life-threatening conditions, including space-occupying lesions, mediastinal widening, lung parenchymal
injuries, and injuries to the thoracic cage or vertebral column.
A high-energy pelvic fracture identified on physical examination or pelvis film may substantially
contribute to shock. Persistent hypotension suggests the need for early operative external
stabilization, operative extraperitoneal pelvic packing, or angioembolization. Technique selection
depends on the facility’s resources and practitioner skill set.
Secondary survey
The secondary survey follows in the wake of correction of immediately life-threatening injury and
completion of the primary survey. Thus, the secondary survey may not occur until after an emergency
operation has been completed. The secondary survey includes a detailed history, complete physical
examination, additional radiologic examinations, and special diagnostic studies. Many institutions
include the focused assessment with sonography in trauma (FAST) examination as part of the primary
survey rather than part of the secondary survey.
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The history should include an assessment of the following items, which can be remembered by using
the AMPLE acronym: A = Allergies; M = Medications; P = Past medical, surgical, and social history; L =
Last meal; and E = Events leading to injury, scene findings, notable interventions, and recordings en
route to the hospital.
Detailed examination
Head and face and neurology
Palpate the entire cranium and face evaluating for injury and instability. Sutures, staples, or Rainey
clips may be helpful in controlling bleeding from large scalp flaps. Palpate for facial crepitus and a
mobile middle third of the face as a clue to potential difficulty in airway control. Hemotympanum and
the presence of bruising around the eyes (ie, raccoon eyes) and mastoid process (ie, Battle sign)
suggest basal skull fracture.
Recheck the pupils, and repeat GCS scoring. Evaluate the cranial nerves, peripheral motor and
sensory function, coordination, and reflexes. Identify any neurologic asymmetry. Patients with
lateralizing signs and those with an altered level of consciousness (GCS score of < 14) should
undergo cranial CT scanning. Patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) are particularly susceptible to
secondary brain injury, in particular from hypoperfusion, hypoxia, hypercarbia, hyperglycemia,
hyperthermia, and seizure activity. While primary brain injury and primary brain damage (induced
apoptosis after primary brain injury) are beyond the clinician’s control, secondary injury is a
preventable complication with careful attention to detail.
Neck
Maintaining cervical spine stabilization when removing a rigid cervical immobilization device is
imperative. Penetrating injuries of the neck may require angiographic, bronchoscopic, or radiologic
examination depending on the level of injury (ie, zone I, II, or III). In particular, zone II injuries that
violate the platysma may be readily explored, while those injuries in zone I or III benefit from additional
investigation because of the difficulty in identifying and controlling injuries in those zones.
Chest
Reexamine the chest. Initiate further investigations as indicated by physical examination findings or
radiography results. While aortography was previously identified as the criterion standard investigation
to identify aortic transaction, CT angiography has essentially replaced intra-arterial contrast injection.
Transesophageal echocardiography using an omniplane probe may be safely used as well but suffers
from difficulty with technology access after hours, dependence on user skill set, problematic probe
insertion in patients requiring cervical immobilization, and blind spots at the aortic arch.
Abdomen
Inspect, percuss, palpate, and auscultate the abdomen, noting tenderness and examining for fullness,
rigidity, guarding, or an obvious bruit (rare). Remember that blood is not always a peritoneal irritant,
and hemoperitoneum may occur without obvious external signs.
Inspection of the abdomen may be confounded by distracting injuries and impaired consciousness
from TBI, intoxicants, or prescription medications. FAST scans are routine in most emergency
departments and serve to establish the presence or absence of fluid in 4 distinct domains:
pericardium, right upper quadrant, left upper quadrant, and pelvis. Diagnostic peritoneal lavage is now
rarely used. Extended FAST scanning may also interrogate the thoracic cavity for evidence of
pneumothorax. The practitioner should be aware that FAST scanning is not organ-based imaging, and
FAST scanning should not be used to establish the presence or absence of solid organ injury.
Hemodynamically acceptable patients with a positive FAST scan generally undergo CT scanning to
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establish the source of presumed hemorrhage. Patients with a positive FAST scan who are unstable
generally proceed to operative intervention in the emergency department (cardiac tamponade) or the
operating room (intraperitoneal hemorrhage).
FAST scanning does not evaluate the retroperitoneum, and a normal FAST scan may coexist with
substantial retroperitoneal hemorrhage. Also, a positive FAST scan may indicate ascites instead of
blood, especially in those with renal or hepatic impairment.
Limbs
Inspect, palpate, and move the limbs to determine their anatomic and functional integrity. Pay attention
to the adequacy of the peripheral circulation and integrity of the nerve supply. Arterial insufficiency in
patients with a displaced fracture or dislocation requires immediate treatment, generally fracture
reduction and/or joint relocation. Pulse inequality should be assessed by means of an ankle-brachial
index with diagnostic intervention reserved for those with an absolute ABI difference of 0.2 or greater
from one side to the other. Liberal use of diagnostic plain radiography is essential in excluding
extremity fracture in patients with mixed mechanisms of injury and in those who cannot participate in
an examination because of significant TBI, intoxicants, or other causes.
Log roll
The log roll refers to the slow controlled turning of the patient to each side to assess the dependent
part of the supine trauma patient. Care must be taken to avoid secondary injury from an as-yet
undiagnosed unstable fracture. This examination concentrates on the back of the head, neck, back,
and buttocks, and it includes a rectal examination. The log roll also provides a convenient time to
remove the long immobilization board. The board has not been shown to prevent injury in the
presence of an unstable vertebral fracture, but it is highly correlated with pressure ulceration in
patients who remain on the board for prolonged periods of time (ie, until diagnostic intervention is
complete).
This procedure should be carried out by at least 4 people. The first person stabilizes the head and
neck, the second and third persons turn the patient, and the fourth person examines the patient’s
dorsum and performs the digital rectal examination. At the completion of the examination, and if the
patient is not on an x-ray film bearing stretcher, the chest x-ray plate is readily positioned behind the
patient. Spine imaging most commonly proceeds as part of the CT scan using reformatted images.
This technique has been demonstrated to have equal, and in some studies superior, efficacy to AP
and lateral thoraco-lumber spine imaging for fracture identification.
Reevaluation
During the secondary survey, the ABCDE system should be used to constantly reevaluate the patient,
and an ongoing diagnostic and therapeutic plan should be revised, as indicated, by the patient’s
response to intervention and diagnostic test results.
regionalization further stresses an already stressed emergency medicine system. Exacerbating this
problem is the overcrowding of the current intensive care unit (ICU) beds in the trauma facilities. Thus,
it is expected that prolonged emergency department length of stay will occur in the oversubscribed
trauma facility. An increasing role is therefore anticipated for the emergency medicine practitioner in
the prolonged emergency department management of the trauma patient.
The initial management and injury identification detailed above initiates multiple pathways for the
trauma patient that may lead to discharge home, transfer to a specialty facility (ie, burn center),
hospital admission (general ward, step-down unit [intermediate dependency unit], ICU [high
dependency unit]), operating room, or angiography suite. The specific management is beyond the
scope of this article, but management of the injured patient is often collaborative because of the nature
of the injury complex, as well as manpower limitations.
With the rise of acute care surgery, as promulgated by the American College of Surgeons Committee
on Trauma and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, the trauma surgeon increasingly
covers trauma, surgical critical care, and emergency general surgery. Therefore, the emergency
medicine practitioner who is resident in the emergency department needs to assume a larger role in
the management of trauma patients who are awaiting a destination bed for ongoing management.
Generation of jointly agreed upon guidelines for management is essential in ensuring smooth, high-
quality care for the injured patient. Often, subspecialty input is of significant benefit in guideline
generation (ie, management and clearance of the cervical spine). Additionally, several guidelines have
been generated by the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST; www.east.org) that
address injured patient management in general as well as with regard to specific injury complexes.
Neurologic Injury
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) occurs commonly in the setting of major trauma and significantly
contributes to poor outcomes. Despite advances in all aspects of trauma care, severe TBI carries a
mortality rate of approximately 30%. Conservative estimates place the incidence of TBI at 200 cases
per 100,000 patients.
Outcome prediction is usually straightforward in those with minimal injury as well as in those with
severe injury. Prediction is difficult for those with moderate and severe injury but not unsurvivable
injury patterns. Survivors of severe and moderately severe head injuries are likely to be left with some
degree of disability. These disabilities may vary from subtle changes in behavior, including depression
or loss of independence and earning power, to major cognitive, sensory, or motor deficits.
Some patients unfortunately progress to or never awaken from a chronic vegetative state. It is in these
patients that end-of-life discussions to establish a goal of therapy are perhaps most useful. Quite
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often, consultation with an ethics team or a palliative care team is helpful for both the critical care team
and the family.
Treatment principles
The principles of treatment of a patient with TBI apply equally at the time of initial assessment as they
do during ongoing inpatient care. These principles are aimed at preventing secondary brain injury.
Secondary brain injuries include but are not limited to hypotension, hypoxemia, hypercarbia, fever,
seizure, uncontrolled hyperglycemia leading to cerebral hyperglycosis, acidosis, severe alkalosis, and
hyperthermia. Sound prehospital care has a significant impact on patient outcome. This involves
adequate oxygenation and ventilation and the maintenance of an adequate cerebral perfusion
pressure as measures to avoid secondary brain injury. Primary brain injury occurs at the time of the
trauma and is not modifiable by the practitioner.
Secondary brain damage is different from secondary brain injury. Secondary brain damage is the term
applied to the apoptosis that is identified in the injured but not irreparably damaged cells after a
primary brain injury. Thus, the practitioner is limited at present to avoiding secondary brain injury as
the others are not subject to control.
Prehospital assessment
The initial assessment is the same as for any trauma patient. Immediate protection from secondary
injury by avoiding hypoxia and hypotension and by preventing hypercarbia improves patient outcome.
Early airway control in patients with a clinically significant depressed level of consciousness (GCS
score of 8 or acute decreased in GCS score by 2) is essential in supporting outcomes and in avoiding
secondary brain injury.
Hospital assessment
Hospital assessment involves the history of trauma, physical examination, evaluation of posture and
pupillary responses, and additional investigations.
The history of trauma is gained from the patient, witnesses at the scene, attending ambulance staff,
and knowledge of the mechanism of injury.
The severity of the injury is defined by carefully examining the patient's mental status by using the
GCS score, posture, and pupillary responses.
The GCS score quantifies the patient's neurologic status and enables the rapid and uniform
communication of the initial assessment of the patient's possible neurologic injury. The GCS score is a
familiar descriptor used in the emergency department. It is derived from observation and responses to
eye opening, best motor responses, and best verbal responses (see the Table below).
In the absence of confounding factors, such as illicit and prescription drugs and alcohol use, a low
GCS score is a strong predictor of a poor prognosis. Of the 3 parameters assessed following injury,
the best motor response elicited appears to be the most accurate prognostic indicator. A GCS score of
3-8 indicates a severe head injury, whereas a GCS score of 14-15 is mild. A GCS score of 15 is
normal. A GCS score of 8 defines coma.
Spontaneous 4
To loud voice 3
To pain 2
None 1
Obeys 6
Localizes 5
Withdraws 4
Abnormal flexion 3
Extension 2
None 1
Oriented 5
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Confused, disoriented 4
Inappropriate words 3
Incomprehensible sounds 2
None 1
Assess the patient's posture and pupillary response. In patients who are comatose, note any
decerebrate or decorticate posture and pupillary responses to light (normal response is constriction).
Nonoperative or medical therapies are aimed at avoiding secondary brain injury. The 2 major
management philosophies following TBI are as follows: ICP management versus cerebral perfusion
pressure (CPP) management. The ICP management theorists argue that all efforts should be made to
keep the ICP at less than 20 mm Hg. The CPP proponents argue that the ICP may be greater than 20
mm Hg if the CPP is greater than 60 mm Hg. CPP can be estimated by subtracting the ICP from the
mean arterial pressure (MAP). It is likely that both schools of thought have merit, and the optimal
strategy is a combination of both.
PCO2 of 35-40 Torr to avoid cerebral hyperemia or excessive vasoconstriction and induction of
cerebral ischemia
Maintenance of a neutral cervical spine position to avoid impairment of cerebral venous drainage
Drainage of CSF with an external ventricular drainage (EVD) catheter when the ICP is greater
than 20 mm Hg
Isovolemic dehydration for patients with cerebral edema and a high ICP
Avoidance of any unnecessary glucose for the first 48 hours after injury
Controversy surrounds nursing patients in the head-of-bed up position, as this may decrease cerebral
oxygen delivery.
Mannitol is generally avoided in the patient without cerebral edema because of the risk of hypovolemia
from excessive intravascular volume loss. The use of craniectomy is controversial in the management
of cerebral edema. Interrogate for intra-abdominal hypertension in the patient with intractably elevated
ICP, as there are reports of successful management with abdominal decompression.
ICP can be measured by various routes and devices; however, the criterion standard is considered to
be a fluid-coupled ventriculostomy catheter inserted into a lateral ventricle (normal ICP < 15 mm Hg).
Other devices may be placed into the brain parenchyma, such as the fiberoptically tipped parenchymal
pressure monitoring catheter. Some of these devices are also coupled with a tissue oximeter probe to
measure cerebral parenchymal tissue oxygen tension. Their use in enhancing outcome is not yet
clear. Moreover, these devices do not afford the ability to remove CSF as part of the treatment for
elevations in ICP.
As patients age, COPD is an increasingly prevalent comorbid disease process. Thus, the clinician
must be ready to adjust mechanical ventilation to address the expected abnormalities of gas exchange
that characterize different pulmonary conditions of reduced compliance, increased resistance, or
restriction. The clinician should decide what minute ventilation (VE) is desired for a given patient, and
then the clinician should decide on the respiratory rate based upon the desired tidal volume derived
from the patient’s ideal body weight (VE = VT X RR).
Acutely injured patients without acute lung injury (ALI) or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
do not need to be managed along a specific ventilatory pathway, but all means of mechanical
ventilation should ensure that lung injury is not initiated. This means specifying PEEP, flow rate, and
waveform, and assessing the resultant peak and plateau pressures for each patient. An initial ABG is
ideal to assess whether the targeted minute ventilation was correct with regard to CO2 clearance.
Avoid establishing a “one ventilator prescription fits all” method of managing acute respiratory failure
(ie, AC 14, VT 700, 100%,+ 5 for all), as ventilator prescription, like fluid prescription, should be
individualized to optimize pulmonary dynamics.
Similarly, each clinician should have a well-designed rescue plan for patients who are unable to be
adequately oxygenated on their initial ventilator mode once the settings have been optimized.
Available options include pressure control ventilation, airway pressure release ventilation, high
frequency oscillation ventilation, and prone positioning in conjunction with volume cycled/pressure
cycled/APRV modes. No single mode has demonstrated superiority with regard to outcome, but
certain modes offer unique advantages versus other modes.
The author prefers APRV, as it is a modified form of CPAP that allows for spontaneous breathing at 2
different pressure levels, affords for reduced sedation, and has been demonstrated to enhance cardiac
performance and to abrogate basilar consolidation. The interested reader is referred to established
works describing this mode in detail.
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The established trauma patient may develop respiratory failure in-house from pulmonary embolism or
pulmonary sepsis, and the clinician should be keenly aware of the timing of acute respiratory failure to
structure an appropriate differential diagnosis.
The longer a patient is mechanically ventilated, the greater is the likelihood that the patient will develop
ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP). VAP reduction bundles have demonstrated efficacy in
reducing VAP incidence and include head-of-bed elevation of greater than 30 degrees, oral hygiene
measures, spontaneous breathing trials to assess liberation from mechanical ventilation readiness (if
not contraindicated), infection control practice adherence, and, promisingly, silver impregnated
endotracheal tubes to address biofilm-related promotion of tracheal colonization leading to infection.
Of course, appropriate antibiotic prescription practices that reduce induction pressures for resistant
pathogen genesis aid in reducing hospital associated pneumonia (HAP) and health care associated
pneumonia (HCAP), as well as VAP. In several studies, the invasive diagnosis of VAP has been
demonstrated to be more cost effective than traditional diagnostic criteria (fever, bronchorrhea,
leukocytosis, and radiographic infiltrate), principally by establishing confidence in the diagnosis of “no
pneumonia” and by eliminating treatment of a diagnosis that is not present. This also curbs selection
pressure for resistant pathogen genesis, and most notably influences prevalence rates for MRSA,
VRE, and ESBL producing gram-negative rods. Acute respiratory failure is often a prelude to other
organ failures in the critically injured patient.
The criteria are known as the RIFLE criteria (R = Risk, I = Injury, F = Failure, L = Loss, E = End-stage
renal disease). Importantly, the RIFLE criteria also correlate rather closely with mortality in hospitalized
patients. The most recent ADQI Consensus Conference (ADQI 5) specifically addressed whether fluid
therapy created or mitigated the risk for acute kidney injury (AKI).
AKI, like the remainder of the RIFLE definitions, weds a period of oliguria with a measurable but small
increase in serum creatinine concentration. Larger increases and more persistent oliguria define acute
renal failure. ADQI 5 identified that the most consistent risk factor for AKI is a period of hypoperfusion
and that there is some animal data and lesser human data that hyperchloremia plays a role in AKI
initiation when plasma volume expansion is used to treat hypovolemia. Other important causes of
acute kidney injury and acute renal failure (ARF) and progression along the RIFLE pathway include
radiocontrast nephropathy and rhabdomyolysis.
Radiocontrast nephropathy (RCN) appears to be an issue in discrete patient populations. Risk factors
include preexisting chronic kidney disease, hypovolemia, hypotension, diabetes, and iodinated
contrast exposure dose. Trauma patients receiving multiple diagnostic studies are at particular risk for
RCN because of repeated iodinated contrast material exposure; for example, an initial CT scan, a
carotid/vertebral CT angiogram, and then perhaps a traditional celiac angiogram for
angioembolization, all within a 24-hour period.
Prophylactic regimens have explored plasma volume expansion with a variety of fluids and electrolyte
compositions, most recently NaHCO3 based solutions, coupled with N -acetyl cysteine (NAC) plus
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ascorbic acid. The most robust data support the use of NaHCO3 (D5 W+150 mEq/L NaHCO3) plasma
volume expansion prior to and following radiocontrast material administration. It is unclear whether the
effect is unique to bicarbonate as an anion, to the simple abrogation of HCMA when present, or to an
absolute or relative reduction in chloride concentration. At present, no convincing data support the use
of NAC or vitamin C. There is no role for mannitol in RCN prevention, and mannitol may be injurious
by inducing dehydration and a hyperosmolar state. No outcome benefit has been identified for
prophylactic dialysis for RCN prevention.
Trauma patients are also at risk for rhabdomyolysis following various injuries, most notably a crush
injury, and oxygenated reperfusion of a limb with more than 6 hours of warm ischemia time. The
current recommendation is vigorous plasma volume expansion to establish urine flows of
approximately 1.5 cc/kg body weight (BW) per hour. Patients who received aggressive, early therapy
had lesser degrees of renal injury than those receiving lesser amounts of fluid therapy. If a patient is
able to achieve the above urine output target, then urinary alkalinization is unnecessary and will not
confer an outcome advantage. Patients who cannot reach the target may benefit from alkalinization
using NaHCO3.
At present, there is no evidence-based role for mannitol in managing rhabdomyolysis, and there is
evidence of potential harm from inducing hyperosmolarity. Avoidance of inducing HCMA is a
supportive goal based on experimental data identifying that hyperchloremia can decrease renal blood
flow and glomerular filtration rate in an independent fashion.
It is likely that a more precise understanding of AKI/ARF and progression of renal disease will await
large-scale studies of the natural history of renal biomarkers in serum (cystatin) and urine (kidney
injury marker-1, N -acetyl-b-D glucosaminidase [tubular damage], glutathione transferase-a [proximal
tubular damage], and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin [putative indicator of renal ischemia]).
Similarly, understanding the precise relationship among endothelial glycocalyx integrity and plasma
volume expander selection, dose, and timing requires a more in-depth investigation into the molecular
underpinnings of that particular system and its behavior in the low oxygen tension environment of the
renal medulla.
Hepatic failure
A common organ to fail besides the lungs and the kidneys is the liver. Hepatic failure is a marker of the
patient’s overall status. It is not uncommon to identify hyperbilirubinemia with concomitant sepsis, but
acute hepatic failure, identified as hypoproteinemia, coagulopathy, jaundice, and ascites, is a grave
sign. The clinician should look for treatable causes of fulminant hepatic failure, including acute portal
vein thrombosis, hepatic vein thrombosis, intoxicants, medication reactions, undisclosed cirrhosis,
blood transfusion incompatibility, hepatic artery injury, and acute viral hepatitis.
Adrenal insufficiency
Adrenal insufficiency, absolute or relative, may accompany adrenal hemorrhage after injury, but it
appears to do so less frequently than as a result of sepsis.
At present, no consensus exists as to how to diagnose adrenal insufficiency (absolute cortisol level vs
stimulation test vs clinical scenario without testing), as to how to treat (glucocorticoid alone vs the
addition of mineralocorticoid), or as to how to terminate therapy once it is initiated (abrupt cessation at
7 d vs taper over a total of 10-14 d).
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Hyperglycemia may be considered another endocrine system failure in that the native system is
unable to meet the demands placed upon it in those without preexisting diabetes. Current data support
glycemic control by a continuous infusion of insulin in patients requiring mechanical ventilation as a
means of improving sepsis relevant as well as other outcomes. The target range is currently unclear
and spans 110-150 mg/dL. Increasing data documents the deleterious effects of hypoglycemia, in
particular in those with TBI, when engaging in tight glycemic control (intensive insulin therapy; IIT). It is
currently unclear if the benefits ascribed to tight glycemic control are time limited (ie, only realized over
the first 2-7 d) or whether benefits accrue over prolonged periods (ie, the ventilated patient spending 3
mo in the ICU).
One retrospective study of 1422 trauma patients examined 3 glucose control regimens (moderate,
aggressive, and relaxed) and found that the moderate protocol appeared to provide the best glycemic
control with the lowest incidence of hypoglycemia. [8]
Injured patients may commonly develop anemia as a result of external losses (eg, scene hemorrhage,
intraoperative losses), underproduction, and excessive blood sampling. Hemolysis is a much less
common cause of anemia following injury. It is clear that patients who are bleeding should be
transfused with packed red blood cells for restoration of red cell mass and with fresh frozen plasma, as
required, for coagulopathy correction. The optimal target hemoglobin level has yet to be established.
Current evidence documents that a hemoglobin level of 7 g/dL may be safely maintained in the
critically ill without untoward effects on mortality or cardiac appropriate outcome variables compared to
a hemoglobin level of 9 g/dL.
The reader should note that these studies excluded patients with active myocardial ischemia, but they
did include patients with known coronary artery disease. It is clear that red blood cell transfusion is
associated with unfavorable immunomodulation, especially with older banked blood, and it has been
strongly correlated with an increased risk of infection and ALI. While most of the blood in the United
States is leukoreduced, it is not WBC free. The absolute impact of leukoreduction is less clear than
one might like but has become established as a standard. All blood transfused in the European Union
is leukoreduced by law.
Anemia management with erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESAs) has drawn intense scrutiny and
criticism, polarizing clinicians and patients. The latest trial of ESAs in trauma patients (EPO III) noted a
significant improvement in trauma patient survival when treated with erythropoietin. It appeared that
the effect was separate and distinct from the hematinic effect of the delivered erythropoietin dose. This
suggests another mechanism of action for erythropoietin that merits investigation. Nonetheless, EPO
therapy is not inexpensive and has not been universally adopted mainly based on cost analysis.
Skin failure
Patients in the ICU after major trauma are often total body water and salt overloaded. They may or
may not have concomitant intravascular volume overload; hypovolemia commonly coexists with total
body water and salt excess.
In this set of patients in particular, one finds an increased risk of pressure ulceration. Despite routine
turning and repositioning, patients may develop pressure ulceration. None of the pressure ulceration
risk scoring systems were developed to address this unique patient population. Rather, the scales
were developed for general ward patients and have thus been applied to a patient population in which
they were not originally validated. Therefore, it is not uncommon to identify patients with a lower score
who nonetheless develops an "unanticipated" ulcer.
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Rigid cervical immobilization devices and TLSO braces present another significant risk for pressure
ulceration in the trauma patient. Thus, early clearance of the cervical spine, when feasible, is an
optimal manner in which to reduce ulceration. Careful attention to TLSO brace fit is essential, as many
patients undergo significant body habitus alteration with large changes in total body fluid (acutely) or
total body mass (more slowly, especially after a major septic episode).
First, patients with hemorrhagic shock will lose clotting factors. This loss will be further compounded
by plasma volume expansion leading to dilution of clotting factors. Second, hypothermia impairs the
enzyme kinetics of the serine based proteases. (Clotting factors are enzymes.) Major efforts are
devoted to the maintenance of intraoperative normothermia, and normothermia has been associated
with reductions in surgical site infection. Third, acidosis also impairs the enzyme kinetics of those
same proteases.
The reader should note that different doses have demonstrated efficacy for different conditions. There
is no single agreed upon dose to be used for trauma-associated hemorrhage. Moreover, since rfVIIa
has a half-life of approximately 2.5 hours, it is unclear whether patients should be routinely redosed or
await a clearly defined need.
Also, the discordance between correction of PT and aPTT and the clinical resolution of hemorrhage is
not an infrequent report. Nonetheless, rfVIIa has become an integral part of the massive transfusion
protocols at many trauma centers. With massive transfusion, the trauma patient is at risk for
alloimmunization, major and minor histocompatibility reaction, hemolysis, and, with transfusion of fresh
frozen plasma, transfusion-associated lung injury (TRALI). TRALI requires supportive care and does
not respond to steroids or antibiotics.
Sepsis
Sepsis is a ubiquitous condition throughout ICUs worldwide.
Trauma patients are no different than other patients with regard to sepsis management, source
control, adherence to sepsis bundles, and outcome, with one exception. In the immediate peri-injury
period, and particularly with major solid organ injury (AAST Grade III and greater) or with intraaxial or
extraaxial central nervous system injury, the use of activated protein C is problematic. The major
limitation of activated protein C is hemorrhage risk. The individual practitioner must weigh the risk of
hemorrhage based on the time postinjury compared to the benefit of activated protein C.
Attention should be paid to antibiotic selection in that patients hospitalized for more than 4 days,
especially in an ICU, should be covered for nosocomial pathogens according to the local antibiogram
instead of community acquired pathogens.
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The Surviving Sepsis Campaign has made a number of recommendations for best practices in ICUs to
avoid and manage sepsis. [9] These recommendations are conveniently grouped into time-sensitive
bundles. Importantly, these recommendations address timely antibiotic administration, appropriate
cultures, goal-directed fluid administration, glycemic control, head-of-bed elevation, oral hygiene, and
regular reassessment of the appropriateness of weaning, as well as the appropriate use of activated
protein C. Adherence to the bundles is less than uniform, but adherence is strongly associated with
enhanced survival from sepsis.
When plasma volume expansion proceeds, despite no increase in flow-based parameters, edema is a
predictable result. In multiple venues (eg, colon, biliary surgery), excess fluid administration has been
associated with increased postoperative pain, weight gain, lung injury, ICU and ventilator length of
stay, postoperative nausea and vomiting, diplopia, skin bullae, diuretic use, and fluid and electrolyte
abnormalities. One study demonstrated a reduced incidence of intraabdominal hypertension when
using colloids instead of crystalloid fluids for plasma volume expansion. The reduced intraabdominal
hypertension was ascribed to a reduced total fluid need based on the increased efficacy of colloids
compared to crystalloids.
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Moreover, despite having a temporary abdominal wall closure with one of a number of techniques,
these patients are at risk for recurrent abdominal compartment syndrome (ACS). ACS is defined by
the World Society for Abdominal Compartment Syndrome (www.wsacs.org) as an intra-abdominal
pressure of greater than 20 mm Hg with an attributable organ failure. Trauma patients are at risk for
primary (usually related to hemorrhage or visceral edema) and secondary abdominal compartment
syndrome (usually related to visceral edema or ascites). Decompression is the criterion standard for
management. This may be done in the operating room or at the bedside in the ICU. Increasingly,
abdominal re-exploration is also performed at the bedside with no acutely identified negative sequelae.
The earlier the patient’s abdomen is closed, the less the ICU length of stay and accrued risk for
complications. Previously, patients with open abdomens were routinely heavily sedated and
neuromuscularly blocked. Currently, sedation without neuromuscular blockade is the norm and avoids
prolonged neuromuscular blockade syndrome and a host of other well-documented complications.
Vacuum-assisted closure (VAC; KCI Corporation) and the Wittmann patch are 2 techniques that are
useful to help achieve primary fascial closure. For those who are not able to be closed, either Vicryl
mesh (2 thicknesses) with an overlying split-thickness skin graft or skin flaps will achieve a temporary
closure that leaves the patient with a planned giant ventral hernia. A waiting period of 6-12 months is
generally undertaken prior to reconstruction.
Alternatively, abdominal wall closure with AlloDerm (human acellular dermis; LifeCell Corporation) has
been increasingly used as a regenerative matrix. Mixed results were initially achieved because of
improper placement techniques and improper tensioning. Currently, underlay techniques and proper
tensioning guidelines have helped make this a successful strategy for abdominal wall reconstruction,
both acutely and in those with a planned giant ventral hernia. Many other options exist, including
permanent meshes and component separation of parts techniques.
In the late 1990s, the distinct entity of hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis (HCMA) was identified as a
consequence of plasma volume expansion with solutions rich in chloride relative to human plasma.
Acute sequelae include the need for increased minute ventilation to buffer the induced acidosis,
immune activation, altered intracellular communication, induction of a cytokine storm, RBC swelling,
and induced coagulopathy. Increasingly commonly, buffering of HCMA occurs by using a nonchloride
maintenance fluid, such as D5 W+75 mEq NaHCO3/L at a body weight calculated maintenance rate.
One review noted that there is a discrete and increased mortality associated with HCMA that is
different from the mortality rate for lactic acidosis.
Currently, the best available data establish that resolution of lactic acidosis correlates closely with
survival. It is also clear that many trauma patients have an elevated lactate level without an
explainable acid-base abnormality. These patients have hyperlactatemia, not lactic acidosis. The
elevated lactate level is related to increased endogenous catecholamines that increased carbon
moiety flux through the glycolytic cascade producing lactate and pyruvate in a normal ratio. No pH
changes accrue, but the lactate level is readily measurable. The major error stems from believing that
the elevated lactate represents hypoperfusion and providing additional plasma volume expansion. The
end result is to increase plasma chloride leading to HCMA as above.
Metabolic alkalosis is uncommon as a presenting acid-base disorder, except in those with comorbid
diseases who are managed using loop diuretics that induce metabolic alkalosis (ie, furosemide). In
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general, alkalosis is a late finding and reflects either deliberate buffering of HCMA or induced alkalosis
from diuretic therapy managing the increased total body water and salt that remains from the initial
resuscitation. Most alkaloses are chloride responsive and provision of either KCl or salt in enteral
feeds. Since the average 70-kg person needs 1-2 mEq Na+ per kilogram of body weight (BW) per day,
the average person needs less than the 9 grams of Na+ per day. Each liter of NSS has 9 grams of
sodium chloride, and a regular diet has 9 grams of sodium chloride. Thus, one may add salt tablets (3-
to 9-g aliquots) to tube feeds to repair metabolic alkalosis.
Avoiding HCMA is a readily achievable goal. Using fluids with physiologic concentrations of chloride
for resuscitation eliminates HCMA. However, since LR and NSS have supraphysiologic concentrations
of chloride, one must usually compensate for the increased chloride load. In particular, using a
"custom" fluid, such as ½ NSS+75 mEq NaHCO3, as resuscitation fluid works well instead of LR or
NSS.
Colloid plasma volume expansion also works well since one delivers one third less chloride per cc of
plasma volume expansion because of intravascular retention. The reader should note that despite the
current but unsubstantiated concern that starch resuscitation in sepsis leads to acute kidney injury or
acute renal failure, no such concern exists for hemorrhagic shock.
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