Welcome

I struggled to find PEM resources for my CT3 year, despite the variety of excellent resources out there. I hope this website will help point you in the right direction. I'm not a PEM expert, but am following the guidance CEM have issued (in the form of a syllabus) to put together this page. This page is not endorsed by CEM, and any mistakes are mine.

Please comment with corrections, additions and further suggestions.

All the information here is collected from the internet, and it might be out of date or inaccurate, so please use your judgement and adhere to your hospital's protocols. If you do notice any errors or omissions please comment so we can put them right!

To navigate, decide whether you want to start with a PMP or a PAP. You can then select which PMP or PAP you want to look at. You will then be taken to the summary page for that PMP, with links expanded topic collections. If you know what topic you want to look at already, click on the link on the right hand side.
Showing posts with label powerpoint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label powerpoint. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 August 2013

Chest Trauma in Children

"Know the likely injuries through different age groups including pulmonary contusion and flail chest"

Isolated significant chest trauma is rare in paediatrics, but is still the second highest cause of trauma related death in paediatrics (although whether the death was caused by the chest or by other injuries is difficult to tell). There is an excellent handbook from the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne which probably  tells you everything you need to know. There is a 2008 review in "Trauma" and a really nice overview presentation here.

Most chest injuries are caused by blunt trauma and  RTCs, and are normally associated with injuries elsewhere. The anatomy is similar to adults (excellent podcast here), but children are different - especially if they are younger:
  • Smaller
    • Traumatic forces distributed over a smaller mass
    • Smaller thoracic volume
    • Compact organs
  • Increased chest wall compliance
    • Ribs unlikely to break
    • Internal injuries likely with minimal external signs
  • Compensatory mechanisms may mask hypovolaemia
  • Mobile mediastinum
    • Airway injuries rare
    • Mediastinal shift may cause problems
  • Aerophagia is a common response in children
    • Causes reflex ileus
    • Leads to gastric dilation 

As in adults, there are six life threatening chest injuries to remember, remembered by the mnemonic "ATOM FC". These should be identified on the primary survey:
"ATOM FC"
 - Airway Obstruction
 - Tension Pneumothorax
 - Open pneumothorax
 - Massive haemothorax
 - Flail chest
 - Cardiac Tamponade

The Trauma journal review also reports there are six "hidden" but life threatening injuries:
-Cardiac contusions
-Aortic disruption
-Tracheobronchial disruption
-Oesophageal disruption
-Diaphragmatic tear
-Pulmonary contusion

We're hopefully pretty good at identifying the life threatening injuries. Often we suspect the "hidden" injuries. But how do we make the final diagnosis, especially as we know that we don't want to do unnecessary CTs on children.

This short presentation introduces some clinical decision rules to help you decide who needs chest imaging. Using a paper from the Annals of Emergency Medicine (which I can't access as it doesn't support Athens or Institutional Access) they suggest we only do a CXR in trauma if:
  • Low BP/Increased RR
  • Abnormal chest exam
  • GCS<15
  • Femur fracture
After trauma, most children I've seen have got an increased respiratory rate, so making sure we do a CXR for everyone doesn't seem unreasonable.  What about CT?

Pediatric Radiography have looked at how CT changes our management of paediatric patients. Again, I can only access the abstract:
235 children had a CXR and a CT done. In 1/3 CXR abnormal, and in 2/3 CT was abnormal.
Out of all the children, <5% got any chest procedure

<10% of kids with pneumothorax on CT got a chest tube
91% of CT findings were within 1cm of dome of liver --> visible on CT abdomen.

So this study would suggest that routinely doing a CT chest on all children may be unnecessary. Given that most of our treatment for chest injury is analgesia, and supporting ventilation, CT rarely changes management. Not all pneumothoraces are treated with a chest drain.
I'm not sure I'd be ready to chance hospital policy yet, but it is certainly something to think about! 

Lung Contusion
This is the most common chest injury in children, and can occur without chest wall injury.

Diagnosis:
-  Hypoxia
-  Consolidation on CXR (in 90% on initial CXR)
        - May be irregular and not conform to lobes
- CT scans pick up more scans
       - 38% of dogs experiencing blunt trauma had consolidation on CXR, compared to 100% on CTs


Treatment:
- Oxygen
- Analgesia
- Pulmonary toilet
- Ventilatory Support

Flail Chest
Flail chest is very rare, but can happen. The paraxodical chest movement caused by two or more rib fractures contributes towards respiratory distress. These often occur with pulmonary contusions. There is a very good explanation with some excellent pictures here.

Treatment
- Place the patient injury side downwards
- Intensive respiratory support
- Analgesia

Monday, 5 August 2013

Choking

Choking is in the PEM syllabus, and is a really easy thing to learn. Unfortunately, medics are often notoriously bad at basic first aid!

Resus Council Guidelines
Page 26
Paediatric Algorithm
Adult Algorithm
- Remember - 5 back blows first (the terminology is important to emphasize the force needed).
- Then 5 abdominal thrusts
- If the patient becomes unconscious, you should start chest compressions, even if they have a carotid pulse.

These excellent videos show why it is important to know how to deal with choking:

St John Ambulance Popcorn Video
St John Ambulance Helpless Video
St John Ambulance - Abigail

First Aid Advice:
St John written advice
St John video advice
Red Cross video advice
Excellent divisional summary from St John Ambulance


Choking Presentation

There is a good journal article here (Pediatrics 2013;132;275; originally published online July 29, 2013), listing what children commonly choke on. You won't be surprised to learn that sweets are a common culprit!



Monday, 29 July 2013

Resus Council Guidelines

The resus council guidelines are what we should follow for every resuscitation. The guidelines are clear, and have a good summary of all the doses. They are very useful.

As you can see below, the resus council website has many good resources for anaphylaxis (adult and child).

Above frame from: http://www.resus.org.uk/indx/search.asp?zoom_sort=0&zoom_query=anaphylaxis&zoom_per_page=10&zoom_and=