Injuries — abdomen and pelvis
Abdomen includes from nipples to tops of thighs at front and sides, on the back from tips of the shoulder blades to buttock creases
If pregnant — see Injuries in pregnancy
- Can be serious abdominal injuries without external evidence of trauma
- Penetrating injuries to chest or buttocks can involve abdominal organs
- Injuries to liver, spleen, pelvis can quickly cause life-threatening blood loss — see Injuries — bleeding
- If fractured lower ribs — consider injury to liver or spleen
- Pain and tenderness can
- Be masked by other serious injuries or impaired level of consciousness
- Be absent if spinal cord injury
- Develop slowly over hours (eg peritonitis due to bowel or vessel damage)
Do not
- Do not let person eat or drink anything — may need operation — consider IV fluids
- Do not remove any object sticking into abdomen
- Do not probe (poke or feel about inside wound)
- Do not replace exposed bowel or gut contents
- Do not spring pelvis
- Do not put in indwelling urinary catheter if signs of urethral or bladder injury (eg blood in urethra, bruised scrotum) — medical consult
Do first
- Put in 2 IV cannula, largest possible or intraosseous if unable to get IV access
- Give pain relief — person will be more relaxed and assessment more accurate
Ask
- Mechanism of injury
- Blunt, penetrating, multi-trauma (more than 1 area injured)
- Amount of force — takes a lot of force to fracture pelvis, consider if side-impact car accident, motorbike accident, pedestrian hit by car
- Other injuries
- Pain
- Abdominal pain
- Back pain
- At shoulder tip — may mean bleeding inside abdomen
- On lower limb movement — consider pelvic fracture
- On weight bearing or walking — consider pelvic fracture
- Allergies, medicines, medical history, time they last ate
Check
Remember: Log-roll if concerned about spinal injury, or if possible penetrating injury to back causing circulation or breathing problems. Wherever possible person should be moved with a scoop stretcher and rolling minimised
- 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
Do
- Medical consult, send to hospital straight away
- If in shock — give boluses — adult 250mL, child 20mL/kg and assess response
- Use blood if available or Hartmann's solution or normal saline
- If head injury or not alert — target systolic BP of more than 90mmHg
- Otherwise target systolic BP of 80–90mmHg
- If evidence of shock — low BP and/or high pulse AND suspicion of uncontrolled (internal) haemorrhage AND less than 3 hours from time of injury — medical consult for tranexamic acid
- Adult — tranexamic acid IV — 1g (in 100mL compatible fluid) over 10 minutes THEN 1g (in 1000mL of a compatible fluid) over 8 hours — doses
- Child — tranexamic acid IV — 15mg/kg up to 1g over 10 minutes THEN 2mg/kg/h for 8 hours, dilution 500mg in 500mL of compatible fluid and infuse at 2mL/kg/h (maximum dose 125mg per hour) — doses
- Give pain relief
- Put in indwelling urinary catheter if needed and no sign of urethral or bladder damage — female, male
Splinting
Do — if pelvic fracture
- As soon as you suspect pelvic fracture — put on pelvic binder following the manufacturer's instructions or apply pelvic sheeting
- Pelvic binders should be placed over the greater trochanters — Figure 2.17 and whenever possible should not be placed over clothing
Figure 2.17
Do — if deep or open wound
- Cover wounds with sterile dressing soaked in normal saline then cling wrap
Lay cling wrap lengthways. If wrapped around body it can become too tight, reducing breathing and circulation
- Give cefazolin IV — adult 2g, child 50mg/kg/dose up to 2g — doses — 8-hourly
- For heavily contaminated or severe wounds add metronidazole IV — adult 500mg, child 12.5mg/kg up to 500mg, 12-hourly
- If allergy — medical consult