
Pelvic Arterial Injury
Pelvic Arterial Injury: potentially lethal complication of pelvic trauma; more common that previously reported: >10%

Pelvic Arterial Injury: potentially lethal complication of pelvic trauma; more common that previously reported: >10%

Pre-peritoneal packing is a method of directly packing the retroperitoneum without the need for a laparotomy

Blunt Cardiac Injury: spectrum from asymptomatic with minor enzyme rises to fulminant cardiac failure

Chest trauma is very painful as rest is not possible, pain is experienced with every breath. A multi-modal approach ideal with MDT involvement (ICU, anaesthesia and pain)

Pelvic Trauma: Angiography and Embolisation. In centers with interventional radiology capability immediately available these patients may be taken to the angiography suite for embolization

Aortic Injury Investigation Comparison: TOE; angiography; CT scan

Acute Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: patient requires synchronous resuscitation, evaluation, treatment and early transfer to a spinal unit following initial stabilisation

Assessment of abdominal trauma requires the identification of immediately life-threatening injuries on primary survey, and delayed life threats on secondary survey.

Abdominal CT versus DPL: DPL has be replaced by FAST scan in nearly all situationspenetrating abdominal injuries -> require laparotomy

Ziro Kaneko (1915 – 1997) Japanese neuropsychiatrist. Pioneer in the field of Geriatric Psychiatry in Japan. Doppler Flowmeter (1960)

External Ventricular Drain (EVD): ICP monitor than allows CSF drainage; measurement and treatment of raised ICP

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) is a permanent localised or diffuse dilatation of the abdominal aorta to 1.5 times its normal diameter that involving all three layers of the vessel wall