What Is the Treatment for Chest Injuries?
What is trauma to the breast?
“With a severe head injury, the brain surrounded by this fluid moves within the skull with the potential of blood vessels breaking” causing potentially fatal bleeding compressing the brain. Head trauma can also directly lead to blood vessels within the brain rupturing.
This indicates the importance of chest trauma among all traumas. Blunt chest trauma is usually caused by motor vehicle accident, falling from height, blunt instrument injury and physical assault. As a result of chest trauma, many injuries may occur, such as pulmonary injuries, and these require urgent intervention.
1 Chest trauma injuries can range from thoracic wall contusion or laceration, to pneumothorax (PTX), flail chest, and cardiac tamponade. Any injury within the “box” described as the region in between the nipple lines, inferior neck line and diaphragm often results in injury to underlying organs.
Injuries to the chest wall include fractured ribs, fractured sternum (breastbone) and/or bruising to the lungs. They normally occur following an impact trauma to the chest, such as falling from a height, a road traffic accident or during impact sports.
Chest trauma can be penetrating or blunt. If the injury pokes through the skin (stabbing, gunshot wound, an arrow through the heart, etc.) we call it penetrating chest trauma. If a sharp object tearing deep into skin and muscle isn't the main cause of tissue damage, consider it blunt chest trauma.
The treatments for blunt chest trauma identified were grouped into four main categories: surgical stabilisation of rib fractures, analgesia for effective pain relief, the implementation of clinical protocols and multidisciplinary interventions, and other interventions, including ventilation and video assisted ...
The common types of chest injuries are damaged blood vessels, organ contusion or laceration, pneumothorax, haemothorax and rib fractures.
Chest injuries may be caused by:a blunt injury, such as from sport, or from a punch or kick, or from a fall.a penetrating wound, such as from a gun or a knife.a crushing injury, such as from a road accident.
Injuries to the heart and lungs are primary and vital since they have the highest mortality if missed. Injuries to other thoracic structures also need to be considered; ribs, clavicle, trachea, bronchi, esophagus, and arteries including the aorta and veins need to be evaluated in the secondary and tertiary survey.
A chest injury is any form of physical injury to the chest including the ribs, heart and lungs. Chest injuries account for 25% of all deaths from traumatic injury. Typically chest injuries are caused by blunt mechanisms such as motor vehicle collisions or penetrating mechanisms such as stabbings.
This is the official approximate match mapping between ICD9 and ICD10, as provided by the General Equivalency mapping crosswalk. This means that while there is no exact mapping between this ICD10 code S29.8XXA and a single ICD9 code, 959.11 is an approximate match for comparison and conversion purposes.