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Open trauma wounds

Open trauma wounds: Excerpt from Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition)

Open trauma wounds (abrasions, avulsions, crush wounds, lacerations, missile injuries, and punctures) are injuries that commonly result from home, work, or motor vehicle accidents and from acts of violence.

Signs and symptoms

In all open wounds, assess the extent of injury, vital signs, level of consciousness (LOC), obvious skeletal damage, local neurologic deficits, and general patient condition. Obtain an accurate history of the injury from the patient or witnesses, including such details as the mechanism and time of injury and any treatment already provided. If the injury involved a weapon, notify the police.

Also assess for peripheral nerve damage — a common complication in lacerations and other open trauma wounds — as well as for fractures and dislocations. Signs of peripheral nerve damage vary with location:

radial nerve — weak forearm dorsiflexion, inability to extend thumb in a hitchhiker’s sign

median nerve — numbness in tip of index finger; inability to place forearm in prone position; weak forearm, thumb, and index finger flexion

ulnar nerve — numbness in tip of little finger, clawing of hand

peroneal nerve — footdrop, inability to extend the foot or big toe

sciatic and tibial nerves — paralysis of ankles and toes, footdrop, leg weakness, numbness in sole.

Most open wounds require emergency treatment. In those with suspected nerve involvement, however, electromyography, nerve conduction, and electrical stimulation tests can provide more detailed information about possible peripheral nerve damage.

Diagnosis

A thorough physical examination of the patient will reveal traumatic wounds. They may be seen during the primary and secondary assessment of the patient.

Treatment

If hemorrhage occurs, stop bleeding by applying direct pressure on the wound and, if necessary, on arterial pressure points. If the wound is on an extremity, elevate it if possible. Don’t apply a tourniquet except in a life-threatening hemorrhage. If you must do so, be aware that resulting lack of perfusion to tissue could require limb amputation. (For a description of types of wounds and specific management, see Managing open trauma wounds.)

Special considerations

❑ Frequently assess vital signs in patients with major wounds. Be alert for a 20-beat increase in pulse and 20 mm Hg drop in blood pressure (compare the patient’s pulse and blood pressure taken when he’s sitting with those taken when he’s lying down), increased respiratory rate, decreased LOC, thirst, and cool, clammy skin — all indicate blood loss and hypovolemic shock.

❑ Administer oxygen as ordered.

❑ Send blood samples to the laboratory for type and crossmatch, complete blood count (including hematocrit and hemoglobin level), and prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times.

❑ Prepare the patient for surgery if needed.

❑ As much as possible, tell the patient about the procedures that he’ll undergo (even if he’s unconscious) and provide reassurance.

❑ Start I.V. lines, using two large-bore catheters, and infuse lactated Ringer’s solution, normal saline solution, or whole blood as ordered.

❑ Insert a central venous pressure line and place the patient in a modified V position (with his head flat and his legs elevated). If the modified V position doesn’t help, Trendelenburg’s position may be an alternative.

Pictures

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Open trauma wounds - 1967.1.png
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Book Source Details

  • Book Title: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition)
  • Author(s): Springhouse
  • Year of Publication: 2005
  • Copyright Details: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), Copyright © 2005 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

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Copyright notice for book excerpts: Copyright © 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved.




More About This Book:
Title: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition)
Authors: Springhouse
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Copyright: 2005
ISBN: 1-58255-370-X

 » Next page: Abdominal trauma (Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))

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