bigbaldguy
Former medic seven years 911 service in houston
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Whoa! Whoa! Whoa! Hold your horses buddy! Several issues here.
#1) Thoracostomy? What, what.......just automatically?
#2) Since when have splints needed to be sterile?
#3) "Going crazy" with the tape, why? So we can inhibit chest wall expansion?
#4)Pain medication optional? Oh really? I suppose TECHNICALLY it is. But answer this: You have just had your chest crushed, your sternum completely separated, you cannot breathe, someone has just shoved a 10 guage railroad spike between your few good ribs left, and applied the equivalent pressure of a Army sandbag on your chest with tape and dressings. Do you want a leetle something? Or...was that just an option?
I would not recommend the approach suggested by yourself, simply because the taping and splinting will, as aforementioned, restrict chest all movement while not doing all that much to stabilize the flailed sternum. (Unless of course you splint it tight enough to secure it to the spine.) Furthermore, the reduced expansion will reduce airflow (no duh) to an already damaged and probably swelling portion of lung tissue, greatly increasing the likelihood of developing atelectasis.
Now then, the thoracostamy, do keep that in mind as it will come in later. (Actually, the consideration thereof will come in.)
As for the problem of reduced air movement (due to decreased airway pressures) CPAP or PPV has been shown to be marvelously effective in the cases of flail segments and separated sturnums (now THAT is an odd plural....). All these failing of course, simply RSI that poor dude (who by now would be screaming from lack of pain control. Or possibly not screaming because of near inability to move air....but would still be screaming in his head.) SO....hit him with some fentynal, or morphine, or something! (Preferably well before some of these interventions.)
The thoracostamy in my opinion really only comes into play in this case in the event the patient develops as tension pneumothorax secondary to positive airway pressure.
Side note: If I ever run across a medic who is doing needle thoracostamys arbitrarily on any chest trauma patient, I will get a bunch of firefighters to hold him down while I administer a needle thoracostamy to release all of the evil heart he has inside that chest.
Somebody needs a nap