Trauma
Blast Injury
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Blast Injury
, Explosion Related Injury, Explosive Agents, Bombing Injury
See Also
Pulmonary Blast Injury
Trauma Team Activation
(TTA)
Trauma Primary Survey
Trauma Secondary Survey
Pediatric Trauma
ABC Management
(
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
)
Emergency Procedure
Penetrating Trauma
Trauma Center
Trauma Triage in the Field
JumpSTART Pediatric Multiple Casualty Incident Triage
SALT Mass Casualty Triage Algorithm
Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment
(
START Triage
)
Mass Casualty Incident
Decontamination
Contaminated Casualty Management
Decontamination in Children
Chemical Weapon
Biological Weapon
(
Bioterrorism
)
Biological Neurotoxin
Toxin Antidote
s
Violence in the Hospital
Personal Protection Equipment
Respiratory Personal Protective Equipment
Causes
Explosive types (based on rate of burn)
High order explosives (detonate)
Result in a supersonic over-pressurization shock wave, expanding rapidly from detonation point
Agents include Ammonium nitrate (ANFO), dynamite (TNT), Semtex
Low-order explosives (deflagrate)
Rapidly burns, but advances more slowly subsonic (<1000 m/s) than a high order explosive
Devices and agents include pipe bombs, gun powder, and molotov cocktails (or other petroleum based bombs)
Risk Factors
Greatest Injury
Enclosed space blasts (e.g. building, bus), underground or underwater blast
Proximity to the explosive
High order explosive
Bombs encased with projectiles
Mechanism
Explosive detonation results in rapid conversion of solid or liquid to a gas, with a subsequent sudden release of energy
Pressure peaks initially and then rapidly loses pressure
Pressure falls below sub-atmospheric pressure
Finally pressure returns to normal
Fragmentation occurs when projectiles (e.g. nails, bolts, nuts) are housed within the bomb
Typically result in most significant secondary injuries
Pressure and fragmentation effects fall off exponentially with distance from the blast
Doubling the distance from the blast, results in a 9 fold drop in experienced force
Adverse Effects
Primary Blast Injury
Mechanism
Injuries result from blast's direct pressure wave effects (especially high order explosives)
Greatest injuries are to gas containing organs (middle ear, lungs, bowel) due to pressure gradient
Associated injuries
Pulmonary Barotrauma
(
Blast Lung
)
Most common lethal injury
Pneumothorax
Pulmonary Contusion
Arterial Gas Embolism
Results in
Occlusion
of the spinal cord or brain most commonly
Gastrointestinal
Barotrauma
Most common in underwater blast injuries
May include mesenteric shear injury,
Liver Laceration
,
Splenic Rupture
, intestinal rupture
Genitourinary
Barotrauma
Testicular rupture may occur
Globe Rupture
Tympanic Membrane Rupture
(or hemotympanum)
Most susceptible to even low level blast injuries (5 PSI above barometric pressure)
Ear
Barotrauma
is not a reliable indicator of greater internal injuries (e.g. lung, bowel)
Traumatic Brain Injury
Distinguish from
Arterial Gas Embolism
related CVA
Adverse Effects
Secondary Blast Injury
Mechanism
Most common form of blast-related injury
Most common form of lethal injury aside from building collapse
Injury from flying debris (e.g. shrapnel)
Radius of potential injury from epicenter is much greater than the blast pressure force itself
Injured body parts are widely dispersed and often unpredictable
Projectiles directly strike the blast victim
Nails, bolts or nuts within the bomb casing
Damaged people or materials are propelled by the blast force
Precaution
Deeper, serious injuries may exist despite relatively mild external wounds
Treat all wounds as contaminated (avoid primary closure)
Associated injuries
Penetrating Trauma
Blunt
Trauma
Fracture
s
Soft Tissue Injury
Trauma
tic amputation
Compartment Syndrome
Adverse Effects
Tertiary Blast Injury
Mechanism
Blast victim is propelled by the blast force (blast wind) against another object
May result in blunt or
Penetrating Trauma
Associated Injuries
Fracture
s
Joint dislocations
Compartment Syndrome
Trauma
tic amputations
Closed Head Injury
Adverse Effects
Quaternary Blast Injury
Mechanism
Environmental injuries and exposures related to the blast
Associated injuries
Burn Injury
Inhalation Injury
Toxin exposures (
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
, Cyanide
Poisoning
)
Chemical Weapon
,
Biological Weapon
or Radiological Weapon exposure
Exacerbation of chronic disease (e.g.
Asthma Exacerbation
or
COPD
exacerbation,
Acute Coronary Syndrome
)
Adverse Effects
Late
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
(
ARDS
)
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation
(DIC)
Precautions
One Blast Injury (e.g.
Tympanic Membrane Rupture
) predicts other blast injuries
History
Blast Injury specific
Background
See
AMPLE History
Details of injury mechanisms and catastrophe
Hearing Loss
,
Ear Pain
,
Tinnitus
,
Ear Drainage
Ear
Barotrauma
(e.g.
Tympanic Membrane Rupture
)
Dyspnea
, cough or
Hemoptysis
See
Pulmonary Blast Injury
Pulmonary Barotrauma
(most common lethal injury)
Pulmonary Contusion
Hemothorax
or
Pneumothorax
Hemorrhagic Shock
Chest Pain
Chest
blunt or
Penetrating Trauma
Hemothorax
or
Pneumothorax
Pneumomediastinum
Arterial Gas Embolism
Nausea
or
Vomiting
,
Hematemesis
,
Abdominal Pain
or bloody stools
Abdominal blunt or
Penetrating Trauma
Bowel
perforation
Testicular rupture
Eye Pain
or
Vision
changes
Globe Rupture
Exam
See
Trauma Primary Survey
See
Trauma Secondary Survey
Head and
Neurologic Exam
Blood or drainage from auditory canal or nose
Hemotympanum
Globe injury
Respiratory Exam
Cyanosis
Respiratory distress
Hypoxia
Apnea
Rales or rhonchi
Asymmetric breath sounds or chest movement
Subcutaneous
Emphysema
Cardiovascular exam
Arrhythmia
Hypotension
Hypotension
compensatory mechanisms may be paradoxically absent in blast
Trauma
Systemic Vascular Resistance
and
Heart Rate
may remain normal despite profoun
Hypotension
, blood loss
Severe
Bradycardia
Seen especially with higher intensity blast injuries
Abdominal exam
Abominal tenderness, rigidity or guarding
Neurologic Exam
Glasgow Coma Scale
Focal neurologic deficit
Seizure
s
Labs
Initial
Comprehensive metabolic panel
Complete Blood Count
(CBC) with
Platelet
s
Blood Type and Screen
(consider cross-match)
ProTime
(PT/INR)
Activated
Partial Thromboplastin Time
(aPTT)
Urinalysis
Urine Pregnancy Test
Labs
As Indicated
DIC considered
Thrombin Time
Fibrinogen
Fibrin
split products
Rhabdomyolysis
considered (structure collapse, prolonged extrication, severe burns)
Creatine Phosphokinase
(CPK)
Structural fire
Carboxyhemoglobin
Cyanide
Level
Imaging
See
FAST Exam
Chest XRay
Pelvic XRay
Advanced imaging as indicated
CT Head
and CT
Cervical Spine
CT
Chest
(with or without
Abdomen
and
Pelvis
)
CT Abdomen and Pelvis
May miss intestinal
Contusion
s and mesenteric injury
Consider repeat imaging at 8 hours if persistent symptoms
Evaluation
Initial
Trauma Evaluation
See
Trauma Primary Survey
See
Trauma Secondary Survey
See
ABC Management
(
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
)
See
MARCH Field Trauma Protocol
See
AMPLE History
See
FAST Exam
Blast Injury specific evaluation (in order of highest lethality first)
See History and Exam above
Multiple
Trauma
Head Trauma
Thoracic
Trauma
Abdominal Trauma
Management
Preparation after initial notification of catastrophe
See
Mass Casualty Incident
Activate hospital disaster plan
Activate available medical and surgical staff, nursing staff and allied health
Use appropriate
Personal Protection Equipment
Sharpie markers are useful to mark patients, bed sheets
Obtain details of catastrophe
Explosion cause and type
Toxin exposures
Casualty location
Expect "upside-down" triage
Victims who are less injured (typically walking wounded) present before those more injured (due to self triage)
Walking wounded self-triage themselves outside of EMS system, presenting individually to local hospitals
Triage patients directly to their proper unit
Acute surgical emergencies are triaged to the operating room
Intensive Care
unit patients are triaged to the ICU
Anticipate total casualties
Expect 50% of casualties in the first hour after an incident
Double the number presenting in hour one, to estimate total casualties
Structural collapse is associated with greater injuries, toxins (e.g.
Carbon Monoxide
), delayed presentations
Stage and staff areas based on triage categories (typically assigned by EMS at scene)
See
Trauma Triage in the Field
See
JumpSTART Pediatric Multiple Casualty Incident Triage
See
SALT Mass Casualty Triage Algorithm
Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment
(
START Triage
)
Patients are categorized into minor (green), delayed (yellow), immediate (red) and deceased/expected (black)
Those in delayed group should be frequently reassessed for decompensation
Prepare for expected injuries
Closed Head Injury
Chest Trauma
Musculoskeletal Trauma
Abdominal Trauma
Open wounds
Management
Blast specific injury management
See
Pulmonary Blast Injury
See
Arterial Gas Embolism
Acute Stabilization
See
Trauma Primary Survey
See
Trauma Secondary Survey
See
ABC Management
(
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
)
See
MARCH Field Trauma Protocol
Abdominal Trauma
Abdominal complications may be delayed 2-14 days
Observe symptomatic patients for 6-8 hours regardless of normal
CT Abdomen
results
Consider repeat imaging at 6-8 hours
Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Seemingly mild head injuries can have longstanding effects
Tympanic Membrane Rupture
Risk of longterm
Hearing Loss
(one third of patients)
Consider evaluation with otolaryngology
May evaluate for ossicle disruption, or increased risk of
Perilymphatic Fistula
or
Cholesteatoma
Eye Injury
Serious
Eye Injury
is common in blast survivors
Evaluate foreign body
Sensation
,
Vision
change
Trauma
tic amputation
Very high mortality (due to rapid
Exsanguination
)
Associated with multi-system injury
Lower extremities are most commonly involved
Immediate
Tourniquet
application at scene, followed by emergent surgical evaluation
Wound
contamination
Consider all blast wounds contaminated
Debride foreign material and non-viable tissue
Extensive
Isotonic Saline
irrigation
Tetanus
prophlaxis (Td or
Tdap
and consider tetanus
Immunoglobulin
)
Consider blood bourne pathogen exposure in specific cases (
Hepatitis B Vaccine
,
HIV Postexposure Prophylaxis
)
Consider empiric
Antibiotic
coverage
Clostridium perfringens
First-Line:
Penicillin
Alternatives:
Erythromycin
,
Chloramphenicol
,
Cephalosporin
s
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa (severely contaminated blast wounds)
First-Line: Amioglycosides
Alternatives:
Carbapenem
s (e.g.
Imipenem
),
Zosyn
Open
Fracture
s
First-Line:
Cefazolin
Alternatives:
Clindamycin
,
Vancomycin
,
Aminoglycoside
Management
Specific Cohorts
Pregnancy (second and third trimester)
Evaluate for
Placental Abruption
Obtain
Fetal Monitoring
and
Ultrasound
Consider
RhoGAM
in
Rh Negative
women
Consider obstetrics
Consultation
Extremes of age (increased mortality risk)
Children
High risk of
Pulmonary Barotrauma
(
Blast Lung
,
Pulmonary Contusion
)
Have high index of suspicion if
Rib Fracture
s or
Chest Contusion
s
Chest XRay
in most
Pediatric Trauma
Elderly
High index of suspicion for orthopedic injury
Chest Trauma
is associated with greater morbidity
Management
Disposition
Emergent surgical
Consultation
for TTA Level I patients, positive FAST Scan or other immediate surgical emergency
Consider transfer of multiple
Trauma
or significant
Trauma
to the head, chest, or
Abdomen
to
Level I Trauma Center
Admit those with significant, but non-surgical findings on exam or diagnostics
Significant
Burn Injury
Suspected arterial
Air Embolism
(or risk)
Chemical Weapon
exposure
Radiation exposure
White
Phosphorus
contamination (risk of
Calcium
and
Phosphorus
abnormalities)
Abdominal Pain
despite normal
CT Abdomen
Vital Sign
, chest or
Abdomen
abnormalities
Non-extremity penetrating injuries
Pregnant women beyond first trimester (risk of
Placental Abruption
)
Observe for 6-8 hours (with
Oxygen Saturation
) those with positive history or exam findings (see above)
Closed-space or under-water blast exposures
Isolated
Tympanic Membrane
exposures
Observe for 4 hours, patients exposed to open-space blasts without significant findings
Communication may be difficult after Blast Injury (due to
Deafness
,
Tinnitus
)
Written communication and instructions may be needed
Prognosis
Closed Head Injury
is the most common cause of death
Bimodal mortality distribution
Greatest mortality immediately after blast
Second peak in mortality is delayed affecting the most severely injured
Blast victims (contrasted with other
Trauma
victims)
More severe injuries
Require extended ICU, hospital, and rehab stays
Resources
CDC
http://www.cdc.gov/masstrauma/preparedness/primer.pdf
American
Trauma
Society (ATS)
http://www.amtrauma.org/?page=BlastPrimer
ACEP
http://www.acep.org/blastinjury/
References
(2016)
CALS
Manual, 14th edition 1: 42-3
Jagminas (2015) Crit Dec Emerg Med 29(5): 2-11
Swaminathan and Bucher in Herbert (2019) EM:Rap 19(8): 5-6
DePalma (2005) N Engl J Med 352(13): 1335-42 [PubMed]
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