Prehospital Trauma Compendium: Management of the Entrapped Patient - a Position Statement and Resource Document of NAEMSP.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Nichole Bosson, Benjamin N Abo, Troy D Litchfield, Zaffer Qasim, Matthew F Steenberg, Jake Toy, Antonia Osuna-Garcia, John Lyng
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Entrapped patients may be simply entombed or experiencing crush injury or entanglement. Patients with trauma who are entrapped are at higher risk of significant injury than patients not entrapped. Limited access and prolonged scene times further complicate patient management. Although patient entrapment is a significant focus of specialty teams, such as urban search & rescue (US&R) teams that operate as local, regional, and/or national resources in response to complex scenes and disaster scenarios, entrapment is a regular occurrence in routine EMS response. Therefore, all EMS clinicians must have the training and skills to manage entrapped patients and to support medically-directed rescue throughout the extrication process. NAEMSP RECOMMENDSEMS clinicians must perform a timely and thorough primary and secondary assessment and reassessments in parallel with dynamic extrication planning; the environment may require adaption of standard assessment techniques and devices.EMS clinicians should establish early, clear, and ongoing communications with rescue personnel to ensure a coordinated patient-centered medically directed approach to extrication. Communication with the patient should be frequent, clear, and reassuring.EMS clinicians should immediately take measures to effectively prevent and manage hypothermia.EMS clinicians should recognize airway management in the entrapped patient is always challenging. When required, advanced airway placement should be performed by the most experienced operator with proficiency in multiple modalities and alternative techniques in limited access situations.In entrapped patients who are experiencing or are at risk for crush syndrome, EMS clinicians should initiate large-volume (i.e., 1-1.5 L/h for adults and 20 mL/kg/h for pediatric patients for the initial 3-4 h) fluid resuscitation with crystalloid, preferably normal saline, as early as possible and prior to extrication.In entrapped patients who are experiencing or are at risk for crush syndrome, EMS clinicians should administer medications to mitigate risks of hyperkalemia, infection, and renal failure, early and prior to extrication.Tourniquet application should be considered in the setting of the crushed extremity as a potential adjunct to medical optimization before extrication of some patients.Patients with prolonged entrapment with the potential for severe injuries require complex resuscitation and may benefit from EMS physician management on scene. EMS systems should consider an early EMS physician response to entrapped patients.

创伤简编:被夹病人的管理 - NAEMSP 的立场声明和资料文件。
被卡住的病人可能只是被卡住,也可能遭受挤压伤或缠绕。与未被缠绕的病人相比,被缠绕的创伤病人受重伤的风险更高。有限的通道和冗长的现场时间使患者管理更加复杂。虽然病人被卡住是专业团队(如城市搜救(US&R)团队)关注的重点,这些团队作为地方、区域和/或国家资源应对复杂的现场和灾难场景,但在常规急救响应中,病人被卡住是经常发生的事情。因此,所有 EMS 临床医生都必须接受培训并掌握相关技能,以便在整个解救过程中管理被困患者并支持以医疗为导向的救援。NAEMSP 建议:EMS 临床医生必须在制定动态解救计划的同时,及时进行全面的初级和二级评估及再评估;环境可能需要对标准评估技术和设备进行调整。EMS 临床医生应与救援人员建立早期、清晰和持续的沟通,以确保在解救过程中采取以患者为中心的协调医疗导向方法。急救医疗人员应立即采取措施,有效预防和控制体温过低。急救医疗人员应认识到,对被困患者进行气道管理始终是一项挑战。需要时,应由最有经验的操作员进行高级气道置入,他们应熟练掌握多种模式,并在通道有限的情况下使用替代技术、对于正在经历挤压综合症或有此风险的被困患者,急救医疗人员应在解救前尽早使用晶体液(最好是正常生理盐水)进行大容量液体复苏(即成人 1-1.5 升/小时,儿童患者 20 毫升/千克/小时,持续 3-4 小时)。在对某些患者进行解救之前,应考虑在肢体挤压的情况下使用止血带,作为医疗优化的潜在辅助手段。有可能造成严重伤害的长时间被困患者需要进行复杂的复苏,并可能受益于急救医生在现场的管理。急救系统应考虑让急救医生尽早对被困患者做出反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Prehospital Emergency Care
Prehospital Emergency Care 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
12.50%
发文量
137
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Prehospital Emergency Care publishes peer-reviewed information relevant to the practice, educational advancement, and investigation of prehospital emergency care, including the following types of articles: Special Contributions - Original Articles - Education and Practice - Preliminary Reports - Case Conferences - Position Papers - Collective Reviews - Editorials - Letters to the Editor - Media Reviews.
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