What are the common mechanisms of spinal injury?
Motorcycle crashes
Motor vehicle crashes
Pedestrian–vehicle collisions
Falls
Blunt trauma
Penetrating trauma to the head, neck, or torso
Sporting injuries
Hangings
Diving or other water-related accidents
Gunshot wounds to the head, neck, chest, abdomen, back, or pelvis
Unresponsive trauma patient
Electrical injuries
when it is appropriate to use a vest-type short immobilization device
When the PT cannot self-extricate himself from the vehicle
Define the vest-type short immobilization steps:
When should you leave a helmet in place with a spinal injury?
Explain special handling and immobilization considerations for spinal injury for infants and children with extrication from a car seat.
Extrication:
Describe the concept of complete spinal cord injury and differentiate between the concepts of spinal shock and neurogenic hypotension.
Spinal shock is temporary concussion-like insult to the spinal cord that causes effects below the level of the injury
neurogenic hypotension (Neurogenic shock) follows the spinal shock
Describe the anatomy and function of the eye.
Describe the anatomy and function and structure of the face
Describe the anatomy and function structures of the neck
Describe treatment for impaled object in the eye:
Discuss the steps for face injuries:
What are the treatment steps to treating chemical burns in the eye?
Describe treatment of avulsed tooth
Discuss management of injury to the nose:
Discuss management of injury to the Ear:
Discuss management of injury to the Neck:
Laceration to jugular vein:
major blood vessels of the neck is severed:
When should you remove a impaled object from the cheek ?
If it has penetrated all the way through the cheek and is loose
What are the steps to removing a impaled object in the cheek?
Describe the anatomy of the Chest
List the S/S of rib injury and why rib injuries are dangerous
S/S:
Define and Explain the signs and symptoms of open pneumothorax (Sucking Chest wound)
result of an open wound to the chest created by a penetrating object
S/S:
Explain the pathophysiology and signs and symptoms of hemothorax.
thoracic cavity is filled with blood rather than air
S/S:
Explain the pathophysiology and signs and symptoms of tension pneumothorax
resulting from a pneumothorax that continues to trap air in the thoracic cavity with no relief or escape
S/S:
Discuss specific emergency care for an open chest wound.