Atls Advance Trauma Life Support: History
Atls Advance Trauma Life Support: History
Atls Advance Trauma Life Support: History
The first ATLS course was given in 1978 and 1 year later was adopted by the
American College of Surgeons as an educational program. The ATLS courses are
now in their third decade and are taught in over 50 countries worldwide.
The ATLS programs were built around three core concepts which represented a
dramatic change in traditional “medical” thinking
2- The second principle is that an indicated treatment should not wait for a
definitive diagnosis.
ASSESSMENT PRINCIPLES
PRIMARY SURVEY
ABCDE
If a patient can talk, the airway is usually patent, continuously checking this sign
allows for monitoring of airway status
1- Tongue position
2- Aspiration of foreign bodies
3- Regurgitation of stomach contents
4- Mandibular, tracheal and facial fractures
5- Traumatic brain injury
6- Bleeding e.g. a retropharyngeal hematoma
BREATHING
Look for
What to do
CIRCULATION
Compromised by
Assessment
1- Level of consciousness
2- Pulse
3- Respiratory rate
4- Blood pressure
5- Skin color
6- Urinary output
7- Acid base balance
What to do
NEUROLOGIC ASSESSMENT
Assessment by
EXPOSURE
SECONDARY SURVEY
History from the patient or attendants (AMPLE = allergies, medications, past history,
last meal, events leading upto injury)
Inspection, percussion, palpation and auscultation of the patient from head to toe
Special studies such as peritoneal lavage, radiographic studies, and blood studies
maybe done at this time
Chest
1- Check for hemothorax, pneumothorax,flail chest, pulmonary contusions,
ARDS and cardiac tamponade
2- Upright Chest x-ray for assessing air in mediastinum, widening of
mediastinum, fractures, shift towards midline
Spinal chord
1- Neck and spine should be examined for deformity, edema, ecchymosis, and
tenderness
2- Loss of rectal tone
3- Hypoventilation causes by paralysis of intercostal muscles (lower cervical or
upper thoracic spinal chord)
4- Paralysis of diaphgram (involvement of C3 to C5 segment) will result in
abdominal breathing
5- Full series of Lateral, AP, Odontoid and right & left views of cervical spine,
followed by CT of neck if necessary
6- Recommended approach is cervical collar with a long spinal board for
diagnosed injuries
Abdomen
Genitourinary tract
Extremities:
Fat embolism due to fracture of long bones: prevented by early fixation of fractures
Checking of all peripheral pulses: unequal pulses suggest distal vasucular injuries