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Published byMaria Brooks Modified over 9 years ago
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Michael Avant, M.D. The Children’s Hospital of GHS
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OVERVIEW ER to ICU Transition Early Management Priorities – the First 48 hours Organ System Support Complications
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THE FIRST 48 HOURS Communication Damage Control Surgery Ongoing Resuscitation Organ System Support Missed Injuries Manage/Prevent Complications
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Communication: Yes, It’s really that important ! Joint Commission says: 10% of trauma fatalities preventable 67% of these due to communication errors Patient handoff critical The Handoff (Miami data) 24% had missing injuries in ICU record 50% had discrepancies in documentation
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Communication: ER to ICU Handoff No standardization Poorly defined responsibilities Many distractions Differing clinical priorities among services Novice trainees Medical hierarchy Solutions Flattening of medical hierarchy Pilot/Co-Pilot model Trauma checklist
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ICU TRAUMA CARE General Neurologic Respiratory Cardiovascular Hematologic Orthopedic
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ICU Trauma Care : General Hyperglycemia Early enteral nutrition Surgical timing Infection surveillance – fever, wounds Tertiary survey Family communication Ongoing monitoring Prevention of complications & secondary injury
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ICU Trauma Care: Respiratory Lung protective strategy 6 – 8 ml/kg tidal volume Higher PEEP Avoid hyperventilation in TBI Avoid hypoxia Pulmonary contusion Consider TRALI & TACO Sedation of mechanically ventilated pt
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ICU Trauma Care : Sedation Rapid acting, Short duration Propofol 2-3 mg/kg bolus followed by 75 – 200 mcg/kg/min infusion Midazolam 0.1 – 0.2 mg/kg Fentanyl 2 – 3 mcg/kg Ketamine 1 – 2 mg/kg Longer duration Lorazepam 0.1 mg/kg Morphine 0.05 – 0.1 mg/kg Infusions – propofol, midazolam, fentanyl Neuromuscular blockade
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ICU Trauma Care: Neurologic Traumatic brain injury (TBI) most common cause of pediatric mortality Primary vs. secondary injury Hypoxia, hypotension, ischemia Avoidance of secondary injury – Critical! First 24 – 48 hours Single episode of hypotension doubles mortality 4x risk of poor neurologic outcome Goals > 90% O 2 sat or PaO 2 > 60 mmHg Systolic BP > 75 th % PaCO 2 30 – 40 mmHg Consider abusive head trauma
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GOALS OF NEUROLOGIC SUPPORT Avoid secondary injury Mitigate cerebral edema & control ICP Seizure control Avoid hyperventilation Support hemodynamics (CPP) Avoid/Tx hyperthermia Treat hyperglycemia
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Neurologic : Seizure Prophylaxis Seizure Risks – young age, pre-hospital hypoxia, non-accidental trauma, depressed skull fracture, penetrating injury, subdural hemorrhage 70% occur within first 24 hours Non-convulsive seizures common in peds Consider EEG monitoring Treatment Benzodiazepines Keppra (levetiracetam) Fosphenytoin barbituates
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Neurologic : ICP Control ICP Monitoring GCS < 8 Abnormal head CT Abnormal neuro exam Sedation Maintain ICP < 20 cm H 2 0 Osmolar therapy Sedation /analgesia/NMB CPP management Induced hypothermia ( 32 – 35 C o ) Consider reimaging Decompressive craniectomy
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ICP Control : Osmolar Therapy MannitolHypertonic Saline (3%) Long history of useRecent clinical use Little clinical dataSubstantial recent data Rapid onsetSustained response 0.25 – 1 grm/kg3 – 5 cc/kg and/or 0.1-1 cc/kg/hr Diuresis & hypovolemiaHyperchloremic acidosis, thrombosis if Na + >170 Follow serum OsmFollow serum Na + (< 170) Out of favor (except emergent)Currently recommended
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Hemodynamic Support Avoid hypotension !! Lactate and/or base deficit monitoring Superior to BP & UOP monitoring Keep lactate -2 High mortality if acidosis remains > 48 hours CPP Management (CPP =MAP – ICP) Adults 50 – 60 mmHg 6 – 17 yo> 50 mm Hg 0 – 5 yo> 40 mm Hg Consider blunt cardiac injury Arrhythmia Unresponsive hemodynamics
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ICU Trauma Care: Hematologic Aggressive use of blood products Minimize crystalloid Massive transfusion protocol 1:1:1 PRBC:FFP:Platelets PT/PTT vs. TEG/ROTEM monitoring New data on fibrinolysis Alternative therapies Tranexamic acid rFVIIa Fibrinogen concentrate
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Fibrinolysis Definition: Process that restores flow to injured areas by dissolving fibrin clots formed by the coagulation cascade Plasmin degrades Fibrin which worsens coagulopathy Common early in severe trauma CRASH-2 Study : Tranexamic acid should be given within 3 hours of injury Tranexamic acid – inhibits fibrinolysis by blocking plasminogen(prevents degfradation of existing clots) TEG monitoring ????
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MISSED INJURIES 6.5% of all trauma deaths due to undiagnosed injuries Types of missed injuries Fractures – facial, extremity Spinal Vascular Abdominal Risk Altered mental status or sedation Lack of early symptoms Unresponsive to resuscitation Tertiary survey Family communication
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ICU Trauma Care: Complications Hypothermia – coagulopathy Transfusion Related Acute Lung Injury(TRALI) Transfusion Associated Circulatory Overload (TACO) Rhabdomyolysis Hyper/ Hypo – kalemia Hypocalcemia Intra-abdominal hypertension Bladder pressure monitoring Infection
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FROM ER TO ICU – SUMMARY Communication Monitor need for ongoing resuscitation Lactate/Base deficit Minimize crystalloid 1:1:1 Transfusion ratio Lung protective strategy Avoid hypotension, hypoxia, ischemia Hypertonic saline recommended over Mannitol Be aware of fibrinolysis ICP control guidelines Tertiary survey Family communication
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