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Apex Nursing

Reference — Emergency Nursing

Trauma Assessment Reference

Quick reference for systematic trauma assessment — ABCDE primary survey with key findings, life threats, and interventions, plus secondary survey head-to-toe and AMPLE history.

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Always follow your institution's trauma protocols and ATLS guidelines. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Primary Survey — ABCDE Quick Reference

AAirway (with C-Spine Protection)
Normal: Patient speaks in full sentences; no stridor, gurgling, or snoring

Abnormal Findings

  • !Stridor — partial upper airway obstruction
  • !Gurgling — blood, secretions, vomitus
  • !Snoring — tongue obstruction (unconscious patient)
  • !Aphonia (inability to speak) — complete obstruction or cord injury

Life Threats

  • !Complete airway obstruction — immediate death without intervention
  • !Inhalation injury with upper airway burns — progressive edema and closure

Interventions

  • Jaw thrust (NOT head-tilt in trauma)
  • Suction
  • Oropharyngeal airway (OPA — unconscious) or Nasopharyngeal airway (NPA — conscious)
  • Rapid sequence intubation (RSI)
  • Surgical cricothyrotomy if cannot intubate

Maintain manual in-line stabilization (MILS) until rigid cervical collar applied. Jaw thrust maintains c-spine neutrality.

BBreathing and Ventilation
Normal: RR 12–20/min, symmetric chest rise, SpO₂ ≥95%, bilateral breath sounds equal

Abnormal Findings

  • !Absent unilateral breath sounds — pneumothorax or hemothorax
  • !Tracheal deviation — tension pneumothorax
  • !Paradoxical chest wall movement — flail chest
  • !Sucking chest wound — open pneumothorax

Life Threats

  • !Tension pneumothorax — absent sounds + tracheal deviation (AWAY from affected side) + JVD + hypotension
  • !Open pneumothorax (sucking chest wound) — air enters chest through wound
  • !Massive hemothorax — >1500 mL blood in pleural space
  • !Flail chest — paradoxical movement from ≥3 ribs fractured in ≥2 places

Interventions

  • High-flow O₂ (15 L/min NRB mask)
  • Needle decompression: 2nd ICS MCL (tension PTX)
  • Chest seal: 3-sided occlusive dressing (open PTX)
  • Chest tube thoracostomy: 5th ICS AAL (hemothorax, pneumothorax)
  • Intubation for respiratory failure
CCirculation and Hemorrhage Control
Normal: HR 60–100, BP ≥90/60, cap refill <2 sec, warm skin, no major external bleeding

Abnormal Findings

  • !Tachycardia — earliest sign of hemorrhagic shock
  • !Hypotension — indicates ≥30% blood volume loss (late sign)
  • !Cool, pale, diaphoretic skin — peripheral vasoconstriction
  • !Prolonged cap refill — poor perfusion
  • !Distended neck veins — obstructive shock (tamponade, tension PTX)

Life Threats

  • !Exsanguination — any uncontrolled major hemorrhage
  • !Cardiac tamponade — Beck's triad: JVD + hypotension + muffled heart sounds
  • !Aortic disruption — widened mediastinum on CXR
  • !Intra-abdominal hemorrhage — distended abdomen, FAST positive

Interventions

  • Control external hemorrhage: direct pressure, tourniquet (extremity), wound packing
  • Two large-bore peripheral IVs (16G or 18G — arms preferred)
  • FAST exam (ultrasound) for intra-abdominal hemorrhage
  • Pelvic binder for open book pelvic fracture
  • Massive transfusion protocol (MTP): 1:1:1 pRBC:FFP:platelets
  • Permissive hypotension (SBP 80–90) in penetrating trauma until surgical control
DDisability (Neurological Status)
Normal: GCS 15, pupils equal and reactive (PERRL), alert and oriented

Abnormal Findings

  • !GCS ≤8 — severe TBI, requires airway protection
  • !Unequal pupils — uncal herniation (pupil ipsilateral to bleed dilates first)
  • !Cushing's triad: bradycardia + hypertension + irregular respirations — elevated ICP emergency
  • !One-sided motor weakness — lateral cortical injury

Life Threats

  • !Epidural hematoma — lucid interval then rapid deterioration (arterial bleed — middle meningeal artery)
  • !Subdural hematoma — slower presentation (venous bleed; often elderly)
  • !Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) — immediate coma from high-speed rotational forces

Interventions

  • GCS scoring: E (1–4) + V (1–5) + M (1–6) = 3–15. GCS ≤8 = intubate.
  • AVPU rapid assessment: Alert / Voice / Pain / Unresponsive
  • Check blood glucose (hypoglycemia mimics TBI)
  • Pupils: check size, symmetry, direct and consensual response
  • CT head for GCS <15, LOC, or focal deficit
  • Neurosurgery consult for significant intracranial injury
EExposure and Environment
Normal: No additional injuries found on posterior or extremity examination

Abnormal Findings

  • !Hidden wounds on back or buttocks — missed if not log-rolled
  • !Hypothermia — core temp <35°C; part of lethal triad
  • !Burns — extent and depth documentation
  • !Deformity, swelling, crepitus — fractures

Life Threats

  • !Lethal triad of trauma: hypothermia + coagulopathy + metabolic acidosis — mortality >90% if all three present
  • !Open fractures with vascular injury — limb-threatening
  • !Compartment syndrome — pressure within a fascial compartment exceeds perfusion pressure

Interventions

  • Remove all clothing (cut off) — inspect entire body surface
  • Log-roll with 3-person technique — inspect posterior
  • Warm IV fluids, warm blankets, warm environment — prevent and treat hypothermia
  • Photograph all injuries
  • Document extremity neurovascular status: pulse, movement, sensation distal to injury

AMPLE History (Secondary Survey)

LetterComponentKey Information
AAllergiesDrug allergies (especially latex, contrast, antibiotics), food allergies, environmental allergies
MMedicationsAnticoagulants (warfarin, NOACs → bleeding risk), beta-blockers (mask tachycardia), insulin, steroids (impair wound healing), immunosuppressants
PPast Medical/Surgical HistoryPrior surgeries, medical conditions relevant to current injury, tetanus immunization status, pregnancy (females of childbearing age)
LLast Oral IntakeTiming of last food/fluid — critical for anesthesia (aspiration risk), rapid sequence intubation (RSI) planning
EEvents/MechanismHow did the injury occur? MVC speed, seatbelt, airbag deployment, ejection, height of fall, weapon type, contamination (farm injury, bite wound)

Secondary Survey — Head-to-Toe Quick Reference

RegionKey Findings to AssessRed Flag Signs
Head/ScalpLacerations, contusions, hematomas, step-off deformityDepressed skull fracture, Battle's sign (mastoid), Raccoon eyes (periorbital) = basilar skull fracture
FaceMidface instability, dental occlusion, mandible stabilityCSF rhinorrhea (clear fluid from nose), orbital fracture, Le Fort fracture
EyesVisual acuity, pupil response, extraocular movementHyphema (blood in anterior chamber), globe rupture, lens dislocation
EarsTM integrity, external canalCSF otorrhea = basilar skull fracture, hemotympanum
NeckTracheal position, JVD, subcutaneous emphysema, carotidTracheal deviation (tension PTX), expanding hematoma (vascular injury), crepitus (pneumomediastinum)
ChestChest wall symmetry, breath sounds, heart sounds, rib palpationFlail segment, sucking wound, absent sounds, Beck's triad (tamponade)
AbdomenTenderness, guarding, rigidity, distension, FASTGrey Turner's sign (flank ecchymosis = retroperitoneal), Cullen's sign (umbilical = intraperitoneal hemorrhage)
PelvisSingle gentle AP compressionInstability = pelvic fracture → apply pelvic binder immediately; repeat compression is DANGEROUS
GenitourinaryExternal injuries, urethral meatus, scrotal hematomaBlood at urethral meatus = urethral injury — do NOT insert Foley until urology cleared
ExtremitiesDeformity, swelling, neurovascular status distalPulse deficit = vascular injury; pain out of proportion = compartment syndrome
PosteriorLog-roll: inspect back, flanks, spineSpinal step-off, penetrating wounds, flank ecchymosis

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with Emergency Nurses Association (ENA) · AHA ACLS / PALS Guidelines · Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →