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MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES Section IV
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Page 1: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES

Section IV

Page 2: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Personal Protective Equipment

Page 3: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Personal protective equipment

A B

D

C

Page 4: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Prehospital

• Incident command • Securing the area• Secondary device

survey• Triage categorization• Regular trauma

protocols

• Radiation survey• Survey for chemical

contamination• Did the blast occur in

an enclosed setting?

Page 5: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Secondary Devices

• Secondary explosive devices are designed to explode after a primary explosion has attracted large numbers of responders to the scene to inflict additional injury, damage, and fear.

• Hidden in out of view locations, or camouflaged

Page 6: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

U.S. Fire Administration Guidelines

• Anticipate the presence of a secondary device at any suspicious incident.

• Search for a secondary device before moving into the incident area.

• Avoid touching or moving anything that may conceal an explosive device.

Page 7: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

U.S. Fire Administration Guidelines

• Effectively manage the scene with boundaries, exclusion zones, triage areas, etc.

• Evacuate victims and non-essential personnel as quickly as possible.

• Preserve the scene as much as possible for evidence collection and crime investigation.

Page 8: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Prehospital Special Considerations

• Judicious use of IV fluids:– Overzealous fluid administration may worsen

primary pulmonary injury and bleeding• Cautious mechanical ventilation:

– Mechanical ventilation and positive pressure may increase the risk of alveolar rupture and air embolism

Page 9: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Prehospital Special Considerations

• Cautious air transport• Air embolization:

– Place patient in a prone left lateral position with the head down

Page 10: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Mass Casualty Triage• Dynamic process• START (Simple Triage

And Rapid Treatment)– RPM

• Respirations > 30• Pulse Cap refill >2 sec• Mental status

• JumpStart for Pediatrics

Page 11: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Triage Categorization

• Red• Yellow• Black • Green

• Immediate• Delayed• Dead or

expectant• Minimal

Page 12: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after
Page 13: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after
Page 14: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after
Page 15: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

New Proposed National Triage Systems: SALT

• S• A• L• T

• Sort• Assess• Life threatening interventions• Transport &/or Treatment

Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2008;2(Suppl 1):S25–S34

Page 16: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Sort

• Walk• Wave• Can’t move or waive

Page 17: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Assess

• Individual assessment of the three categories in order

Page 18: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Life-saving Interventions

• Open airway• Two rescue breaths• Control hemorrhage• Auto-injector antidotes

Page 19: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Triage

• Expectant or Gray category – Resource based – Dynamic

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Page 21: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Transport

• Transport to the nearest facility of red patients

• Green patients should be directed to other hospitals that are further away and that are not necessarily level I trauma centers

Page 22: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

TM Perforation• Keep dry• Prophylactic topical antibiotic

– Gentamycin ointment

• Outcome is good– Mixed frequency hearing loss with good subjective

recovery– High frequency sensorineural hearing loss may be more

persistent– Severity inversely proportional to distance from

bombing

Page 23: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

TM – Perforation

• Follow up is needed:– Assess for middle-ear damage– Audiometry– Cholesteatoma– Perilymphatic leak in patients with vertigo

Page 24: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Blast Lung Injury

• Should not rely on TM rupture to predict lung injury:– TM perforations are found in only 60%

of patients with clinically significant injuries

– Clinically significant injuries are present in less than 30% of patients with TM perforations

Page 25: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Blast lung injury• Patients with normal CXR and

ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after a brief observation period

Page 26: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Blast lung injury• Management similar to pulmonary

contusions• Complex fluid management• Mechanical ventilation will increase

the risk of air embolization

Page 27: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Management of Secondary Injuries

• As per protocol• Watch for unusual

shrapnel such as nails and bolts

Page 28: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Bombing Victim

Spinal Cord

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Management of Tertiary Injuries

Page 30: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Management of Tertiary injuries

• As per trauma protocols• Look for crush syndrome

especially in structural collapse:–Myoglobinurea–Renal failure–Hyperkalemia

Page 31: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Management of Crush Syndrome

• IVF:– Start in the field

• Urinary alkalinization:– Myoglobinurea, Urine pH>7

• Mannitol• Hemodialysis:

– Anuric patients, acidemic patients– Correction of electrolyte abnormalities– Advanced planning is needed for surge capacity

Page 32: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Management of Quaternary injuries

• Inhalational injuries• Carbon monoxide• Hydrogen cyanide• Chemical bombs or explosions• Contamination with radionuclides and

exposure to gamma radiation

Page 33: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Carbon Monoxide

• 100% Oxygen therapy• Hyperbaric oxygen therapy

Page 34: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Cyanide Antidote Kit

• AKA the Lilly kit• Contains:

– Amyl nitrite pearls– Sodium nitrite– Sodium thiosulfate

Page 35: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Hydroxocobalamin (Cyanokit®)

• 5 g IV over 15 minutes

• May repeat dose if no response and patient is critically ill

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Adverse Effects of Hydroxocobalamin

Page 37: MANAGEMENT OF BLAST INJURIES - Georgia Poison Center · Blast lung injury • Patients with normal CXR and ABGs, who have no complaints that would suggest BLI, may be discharged after

Thank you


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