Injuries — limbs
- Large amounts of blood can be lost with fractured femur (thigh) or other long bones
- Injuries to hands or fingers can cause long-term problems if not treated properly. If not sure what to do always talk with someone more experienced
Ask
- About pain
- What happened and when it happened
Check
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
Signs of shock
- Increased RR
- Pulse weak and fast or difficult to feel (adult more than 100bpm, child. Older people with heart problems may not get fast pulse)
- Central capillary refill longer than 2 seconds
- Pale, cool, moist skin
- Restless, confused, drowsy, occasionally unconscious
- Low BP for age or relative to person's previously recorded values
- Head-to-toe exam — with attention to
- Pain, swelling and limb deformity, may mean fracture, damaged ligaments or tendons
- Joint movement — if less or more movement than normal or painful, may mean injury to tendon or joint
- Compare one side of the body with other
- Check hand or foot of injured limb for
- Pulses and warmth. If no pulse or skin cool — may mean damage to artery (blood vessel)
- Sensation (feeling). If numb (no feeling) — may mean damage to nerve
Do
- If signs of nerve or circulation problems (cool, pulseless limb)
- Straighten limb, apply firm traction until pulse returns
- Splint limb to maintain position after reduction
- Medical consult
- Give pain relief
Fractured major bones
Fractures to femur (thigh bone), humerus (upper arm)
Do First
- Put in 2 large bore IV cannula or intraosseous access in unaffected limb if unable to get IV access
- If in shock — give fluid boluses — adult 250mL, child 20mL/kg and assess response
- Treat as closed fracture or compound fracture, as needed
Closed fractures
No skin wounds over fractured bone
Do — if pulses weak, absent or reduced sensation
- Urgent medical consult
Do — if pulses, movement and sensation normal
- Medical consult to send to hospital
- Give pain relief
- Try to put limb back into normal shape. If pulse, sensation or movement no longer feeling normal — stop
- Splint limb, put on back slab or strap to other limb or body so person can’t move joint above or below fracture
- Recheck pulses and sensation
- Keep limb elevated
Compound fractures
Fracture is compound (open) if bone or haematoma (fracture bruise) exposed to outside environment in any way
- When skin broken — high risk of tissue and bone infection
- Bone doesn't always poke through skin. May just be small skin puncture
- If not sure — treat all wounds near broken bone as compound fracture
- Treat facial fractures involving sinuses as compound
Do not
- Do not poke or probe wound
- Do not close or suture
- Do not let person eat or drink anything — will need surgery — consider IV fluids
Check
- Look carefully at broken skin over or near suspected fracture for bone underneath
- Immunisation status — tetanus
Do — manage as closed fracture AND
If signs of shock, altered mental state, more pain than expected, visible necrosis or gas crepitus — urgent medical consult
- Medical consult to send to hospital
- Control any bleeding
- Clean and wash out wound with normal saline
- Cover with sterile dressing soaked in normal saline, then cling wrap laid lengthways
- Give cefazolin IV or intraosseous — adult 2g, child 50mg/kg/dose up to 2g — doses — every 8 hours (tds) until sent to hospital. Can give IM if needed but painful
- If heavily contaminated with material embedded in bone or deep soft tissues — ADD metronidazole IV — adult 500mg, child 12.5 mg/kg up to 500mg twice a day (bd)
- If wound has been immersed in water — ADD ciprofloxacin oral — adult 750mg, twice a day (bd)
- If allergy to penicillin or cephalosporins medical consult for clindamycin IV — adult 600mg, child 15mg/kg/dose up to 600mg — doses — every 8 hours (tds) until sent to hospital
- If injury happened in water — ADD ciprofloxacin oral — adult 750mg, child 20 mg/kg up to 750 mg twice a day (bd)