SAQ 158 – Trauma – activation systems and post-intubation ventilation
Model Answer
Question 1. activation systems and post-intubation ventilation.
a. Single-tier features
- Full trauma team activation.
- Activation based on physiological, anatomical, or mechanism-of-injury criteria.
b. Major limitation
- Overactivation, particularly when mechanism alone triggers a full callout, causing inefficient resource use and increased workload.
c. Two-tier features
- Graded response: full team activation for abnormal physiology or specified physical findings.
- A subset of the trauma team is activated for lower-risk criteria, commonly mechanism alone.
d. Major effects
- Fewer unnecessary low-yield full-team callouts and better resource use.
- Risk of failing to fully activate when required, potentially delaying diagnosis or treatment of life-threatening injury.
e. Chest x-ray abnormalities
- Multiple right lateral rib fractures, including fractures in two places producing a flail segment.
- Right lateral heterogeneous pulmonary opacities consistent with pulmonary contusion.
- Possible right lateral clavicle fracture and/or widened upper mediastinum.
f. Post-intubation ventilation optimisation
- Insert an appropriately sized right intercostal catheter if pneumothorax or haemothorax is present; assess need on the left.
- Insert a nasogastric tube to decompress the stomach.
- Provide adequate analgesia and sedation.
- Use neuromuscular blockade if ongoing difficulty ventilating.
- Use lung-protective ventilation and titrate settings to physiological response.
- Elevate the head of the bed to approximately 30 degrees if not contraindicated.
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