Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Head Injury


Surgical Emergencies 247

(i) Splinting reduces pain, making handling easier; it also reduces
blood loss and the risk of neurovascular injury.

5 Obtain urgent vascular and orthopaedic consults if distal ischaemia is
present. Otherwise refer the patient when the other major injuries have been
stabilized.


6 Traumatic amputation of a limb or digit
(i) Control haemorrhage by direct pressure and elevation of the
stump.
(ii) Consider the possibility of replantation, especially in a clean,
sliced wound without crushing
(a) preserve the amputated part by wrapping in a saline-soaked
sterile dressing
(b) seal the wrapped part in a sterile dry plastic bag, and immerse
in a container of crushed ice and water
(c) give i.v. antibiotics and tetanus prophylaxis as for a
compound fracture
(d) X-ray the limb and severed part
(e) refer the patient to the orthopaedic or plastic surgery team
for consideration of microvascular surgery ideally performed
within 6 h of injury.


HEAD INJURY


The diagnosis and management of head injuries is best considered in two groups:


● Severe head injury – see page 29, Section I, Critical Care.
● Conscious head injury.


Conscious head injury


The aim is to differentiate patients requiring admission from those who could be
allowed home.


DIAGNOSIS

1 History
Enquire about:
(i) The nature and speed of impact.
(ii) Subsequent loss of consciousness, drowsiness, vomiting or
seizures.
(iii) The length of post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) from the time of
injury to the time of the return of memory for consecutive events.
This is often underestimated
(a) >10 min PTA is significant.

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