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PMHNP·United States·Advanced practice
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PMHNP certification prep

Trauma Atls

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Pathophysiology

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Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) provides a systematic, reproducible approach to the evaluation and management of the multiply-injured patient. The core principle of ATLS is 'treat first what kills first,' prioritizing life threats in the order they are most likely to cause death. The primary survey follows the ABCDE mnemonic performed simultaneously with resuscitation: A (Airway with cervical spine protection) — assess patency, look for obstruction, manage with chin lift/jaw thrust maintaining C-spine immobilization, definitive airway if GCS ≤8 or inability to maintain airway; B (Breathing and ventilation) — expose chest, assess bilateral chest rise, auscultate bilateral breath sounds, identify and treat tension pneumothorax, open pneumothorax, and massive hemothorax; C (Circulation with hemorrhage control) — assess pulse quality, apply direct pressure to external hemorrhage, establish large-bore IV access, initiate volume resuscitation with permissive hypotension strategy (target SBP 80-90 mmHg in penetrating trauma), activate massive transfusion protocol for class III-IV shock; D (Disability) — GCS calculation, pupil assessment, lateralizing signs, glucose check; E (Exposure/Environmental control) — fully undress, log roll for posterior exam, prevent hypothermia. Adjuncts to the primary survey include ECG monitoring, urinary catheter (after ruling out urethral injury), gastric tube (orogastric if basilar skull fracture suspected), and pulse oximetry. The secondary survey begins only after the primary survey is complete and resuscitation has been initiated, consisting of a comprehensive head-to-toe examination, detailed history (AMPLE), and additional diagnostic studies (CT, X-rays).

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Diagnosis & workup

Diagnostics & workup: - Primary survey adjuncts: ECG, arterial blood gas, chest and pelvic X-rays (obtained during primary survey for unstable patients) - FAST examination: 4-view bedside ultrasound for free fluid (pericardial, hepatorenal/Morrison pouch, splenorenal, pelvic/Douglas pouch); extended FAST (eFAST) adds bilateral lung views for pneumothorax - CT trauma survey (pan-scan): CT head, C-spine, chest, abdomen/pelvis with IV contrast; only for hemodynamically STABLE patients - Diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL): rarely used now; may be indicated when FAST is equivocal and CT unavailable - Cervical spine clearance: Canadian C-spine Rule or NEXUS criteria; CT C-spine (not plain X-ray) for imaging - Laboratory studies: type and crossmatch, CBC, BMP, coagulation panel, lactate, base deficit, pregnancy test, ethanol level, urinalysis - Focused imaging: CT angiography for suspected vascular injury, retrograde urethrogram if urethral injury suspected, echocardiography for blunt cardiac injury

Risk factors: - High-energy mechanisms: high-speed MVC (>40 mph), motorcycle crash, pedestrian struck, fall >20 feet - Penetrating trauma: gunshot wounds (high vs low velocity), stab wounds (trajectory determines injury) - Blast injuries: primary (pressure wave), secondary (projectiles), tertiary (body displacement), quaternary (burns, inhalation) - Elderly patients: reduced physiologic reserve, osteoporosis, polypharmacy (anticoagulants), atypical vital sign responses - Pediatric patients: larger head-to-body ratio, elastic rib cage masking thoracic injury, higher surface area-to-mass ratio increasing hypothermia risk - Pregnant patients: physiologic changes (increased blood volume, elevated heart rate) mask hemorrhage; uterine displacement for CPR after 20 weeks - Anticoagulated patients: increased hemorrhage risk; may need emergent reversal - Obese patients: difficult airway, altered drug pharmacokinetics, difficult imaging interpretation

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US NP · PMHNP

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