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Lateral Canthotomy & cantholysis PHEMC 1st Oct 2014 Will Sargent & Prakash Patel ED Consultant/ Maxillofacial Surgery Registrar Royal Darwin Hospital Indications • • • • • • Orbital compartment syndrome: - Acute facial trauma with retrobulbar haemorrhage Recent retrobulbar anaesthesia Eyelid surgery Infection Intra- ocular emphysema • Compromises opthalmic artery • optic nerve and central retinal artery are compressed = ischaemia • - visual loss within 90 minutes • *** OCULAR EMERGENCY *** Indications • • • • • • Pain Acute decrease in visual acuity/ visual loss Proptosis Diplopia Dilated pupil Increased intra-ocular pressure (>40 mm Hg, Normal 10- 21mm Hg) • Afferent pupillary defect • Decreased ability to differentiate red shades • Chemosis • Ecchymosis around eye • *bold = absolute indications for canthotomy Contraindication • • • • • • Globe rupture - hyphema - peaked/ tear drop shaped pupil - irregular pupil Exposed uveal tissue (red- brown) Restriction in range of movement that is greatest in direction of rupture Don’t wait for a CT!!! Ocular emergency requiring immediate management Periorbital soft tissues Lateral canthal ligament Complications • Irreversible vision loss can occur if retina ischemia time is greater than 90-120 minutes. • Iatrogenic globe injury by forceps or scissor tips • Ptosis due to damage to the levator aponeurosis, • Injury to the lacrimal gland and lacrimal artery, which also lie superiorly. • Bleeding • Infection. • Ectropion Mandibular Blocks - An extra- oral approach PHEMC 1st Oct 2014 Prakash Patel Maxillofacial Surgery Registrar Royal Darwin Hospital ED Indications • • • • • Trauma (e.g. fractured mandible) Facial pain/ odontogenic pain Infection Inability to open mouth Tongue lacerations Anatomy- V3 Anatomy- Maxillary Artery Anatomy Landmarks: 1) Zygomatic arch 2) Condyle of mandible Target zone: Just superior to sigmoid notch Technique Technique • Palpate bony landmarks • Prepare local anesthetic and equipment (30mm blue 23 gauge needle) • Prep skin with alcohol swab/ chlorhexidine • Inject perpendicular to skin ~ 1 thumb width below zygomatic arch & anterior to mandibular condyle • Aim to touch bone at superior aspect of sigmoid notch • Pass needle just superior to sigmoid notch, • Inject the needle all the way to its hub • Aspirate • Inject 5-10 ml of local anesthetic (usually 0.25% marcaine w. adrenaline for 6-8 hrs of anaesthesia) Nasopharyngeal packing workshop – Oct conference ED Key Points: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) Small no. of pts present with severe facial haemorrhage – can exsanguinate if not controlled High likelihood of associated internal head / neck trauma Need to Take the airway first before packing Try Anterior packing first – reassess – then posterior packing if not controlled Involve Max Fac early - ? emergency OT or angiography Injuries: - Mostly blunt injuries 1) Facial injuries associated with other serious inj (Taumatic brain inj, C-spine #, Airway obstruction, Pulmonary contusion, Aspiration ) 2) Types of facial injuries a. Mid Facial # (la fort I - III) b. Mandibular# c. TMJ disruption d. Zygomatic, nasal, orbital # e. Soft tissue injury and oedema f. Haemorrhage g. Associated – Base of skull #, Traumatic Brain inj, C-spine #, carotid inj La Fort # - like crumple zones – Nasal cavity, para-nasal sinuses, orbits act as a series of compartments and progressively collapse and absorb energy to protect brain and cord. I II III 1) I – (horizontal ) involves maxilla at the level of the nasal fossa, horizontal plane at the level of nose – palate-facial separation 2) II – (triangular) involves maxilla, nasal bones, and medial aspects of orbits – freely mobile pyramidal shaped portion of maxilla 3) III – (transverse)# line runs parallel with the base of skull – upper nasal bridge, most of orbit and zygomatic arches (ethmoid bone and cribiform plate BOS #) – cranio-facial dissociation Signs: Gross edema of soft tissue over the middle third of the face, bilateral circumorbital ecchymosis, bilateral subconjunctival hemorrhage, epistaxis, CSF rhinorrhoea, dish face deformity, diplopia, enophthalmos, cracked pot sound – mobile midface for II and III Management: 1) Resuscitate – ABCDE principals 2) Assess and take the Airway – always assume it’s difficult a. Surgical (cricothryriodotmy / tracheostomy req) – prep i. ENT / Anaesthetics – prep neck for surg ii. CMAC with 2 suckers, or mec asp on ETT 3) Stop / Arrest the bleeding a. Anterior packing (Rapid rhino) b. Posterior packing (foleys / or Nasal tampon) c. Gentle forward traction d. Angiography (internal Maxillary artery, ethmoids) e. ? TXA f. Wire reduction of palatal # - Max Fac 4) Involve Max Fac early – Re Emergent surgical intervention 5) Secondary considerations (Wash wounds, ADT, Antibiotics) 6) Imaging – CTA - ? Intracranial inj, ? base of skull #, ? spinal inj, ? carotid / vertebral arteries Packing process - What you need: Nerves of steel!! 1) Intubated (mouth or neck), sedated pt with secure airway!! (can’t do this without first dealing with the A) 2) Laryngoscope - ? easier with CMAC 3) Suction available 4) 2 X Foley catheters 12-14 Fr ?? (bigger is easier) 5) Lube for your foleys 6) 20Mls syringe with N saline 7) 2 X large gynae tampons (compressed to matchbox size) 8) 1.0/2.0 silk suture material 9) 2 x rapid rhinos for anterior nasal packing 10) Ability to provide gentle traction on the catheters after insertion Method – 1) Intubate and sedate pt with the help of Anaesthetic or ENT colleagues – call Max Fac 2) Lube your Two x Fr 14 foleys, and tie your large gynae tampon with 2.0 silk in the middle 3) Under direct vision (with laryngoscope) – pass both foleys into each nare along the floor on the nose – watch passage into oro-pharynx 4) Retrieve through the mouth with magils forceps 5) Tie tampon to the end of the foleys (through the eyes) with the 2.0 silk (match box size) 6) Guide the tampon into the posterior oro-pharnx with you index finger (someone needs to support your airway to prevent dislodgment) 7) Gentle traction on the foleys from the nose to pull the nasal tampon into place and digital pressure through the mouth 8) ? inflate the foleys balloons with 6-10mls N saline 9) Insert 2 rapid rhinos into the medial anterior naso-pharynx for ant packing in normal way (soak in water – then insert along floor of nose, inflate with air) 10) Apply Gentle traction (counter traction by tying to additional Ext tampon as a bolster) 11) Re-assess mouth for continued bleeding 12) High Fives all round – can leave for 48-72hrs (? Antibiotic cover) Consider other haemostatic parameters – Clotting factors, Keep warm, PH, Calcium Complications: 1) Pressure necrosis from packs 2) Dislodgement of airway if intubated orally 3) FB placed in Mouth and nose – label well and document Airway issues: Take the airway!! – multiple approaches Why airway compromise / difficult airway: - Posterio-inferior displacement of maxilla – block nasopharynx # teeth, bone fragments, vomitus, blood, FB – airway obstruction Haemorrhage Soft tissue swelling and oedema Aspiration risk C-spine immobilisation Poorly defined anatomy / deformity / debris Difficult BMV and mask seal If Pt is breathing – Allow the pt to breath spontaneously until optimal conditions are available (ENT/Anaos) Options: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) RSI with direct laryngoscopy or video-laryngoscopy Cricothyrotomy / awake tracheostomy Awake fiberoptic intubation Awake laryngoscopy Supraglottic airways – LMA or ILMA Dirrect Laryngoscopy techniques Suction as you go ETT setup – ETT attached to Mec aspirator and suction Partner suction with CMAC – 4 people required (team effort – co-ordinated visualisation of the glottis) 1 person doing video laryngoscope – CMAC 1 person (left of intubator) – welding a yanker and looking at screen 1 person (right of intubator) - welding a yanker and looking at screen 4th person setting up for a surgical airway – (getting kit ready and prepping neck Periarrest – RSI - Dirrect laryngoscopy with CMAC, LMA backup with Surgical airway if CICO Stable – Resus or OT – with Anaos – awake fibreoptic – with ENT surgical back up Useful references – 1) Lifeinthefastlane – Airway issues in facial trauma / facial trauma 2) EMcrit pod cast 110 – exsanguinating haemorrhage from mid-face fractures 3) Handbook of trauma care – Liverpool hospital trauma manual