NOTE
All the medical procedures and drug administration
mentioned in this text should be done only under a senior
doctor’s consultancy.
·
Primary
survey
·
When
you take the call on the ambulance think if there is a positive
injury mechanism.
·
Assign
each EMT member role. For example on 3 EMT members, 1 can
immobilize the head and handle the airway, 1 can be a team
leader and 1 can bring the nessecary equipment.
·
Don’t
forget the necessary precautions (gloves, mask etc).
·
You
reach the scene:
·
Safety
comes first! (e.g. on fire call the fire brigade; on a gun
fight call the police; on a car accident wait until the police
patrol closes the road; if electric wires on the road call
Power Company). Other dangers are body fluids, blood, passing
vehicles, gas (petrol) on the road, guns, cold etc. Be careful
not to slip on blood.
·
Assess the ambient temperature.
Consider hypothermia in case the patient was too long on cold.
Also a cold skin may not be because of shock, but because
of low ambient temperature!
·
Assemble the necessary
medical equipment.
·
Assess the situation.
·
How
many are the victims? TRIAGE!
·
What
happened (e.g. car accident)? Kinematics (e.g. what injuries
would you suspect on a car collision with frontal direction).
Did the patients have their belt fasten? Is there a positive
injury mechanism.
·
Patient’s
age. Do you need any back up? How will you transfer the patients
and where?
·
Primary
survey.
·
‘TREAT
FIRST WHAT KILLS FIRST’!
·
‘TREAT
AS YOU GO’!
·
A
(airway and C – spine immobilization): First immobilize
with your hands the patient’s head. Do it before you ask him/her
‘are you Ok’ (otherwise the patient will turn to look you!).
Keep the manual immobilization until the patient is completely
tied up on a long board. After the patient’s head manual immobilization,
check ABCDs in the position you found the patient (e.g. supine,
prone, sitting, semi prone etc).
Whichever position the patient is found (prone or supine)
immobilize manually the head (before you ask ‘are you OK?’)
and then check ABCDs. Next, if the patient is prone, align
the patient’s limbs, log roll (don’t forget to look the back!),
place on a long board and recheck ABCDs. The initial ABCD
assessment before log rolling the patient has also legal consequences
e.g. a patient may be found paralyzed on the initial assessment
before we turn him/ her with log roll.
Be careful the cervical collar should not be too tight, but
so much as to enable the patient open the mouth (e.g. to vomit).
·
Start from A. Check for
airway’s patency. A patient that talks has a patent airway.
A threatened airway may be indicated by snoring or blood thru
the mouth or stridor. Open the airway with jaw thrust (or
chin lift if not suspected cervical trauma), perform suction
and place an oropharengeal airway (if no gag reflex).
·
B (breathing). Check RR
(respiratory rate) and breathing effort
and depth. Is breathing shallow and laboured? Check for equal
bilateral chest expansion (if no, exclude e.g. flail chest).
Ausculate the chest (bases, apexes & axillae) and check
for equal breath sounds. Percuss the chest. Any tympany? Check
oxygen saturation (SpO2).
·
Give
oxygen! In case of apnoea or if RR (respiratory rate) is >
30 or < 10, or GCS is <_8, perform BMV (bag mask ventilation)
or intubate.
·
C
(Circulation): check radial pulse. If absent, check
femoral pulse. If absent, check carotid pulse. Is pulse fast
& thready? Also, is it regular or irregular?
Check the BP. Check for obvious external hemorrhage. Stop
it by direct pressure and elevation (if not fracture), or
with arterial root pressure points. Tourniquet should be avoided,
but on uncontrolled bleeding on amputation, place it 10 cm
above the stump and frequently release it. Avoid also blind
vessel clamping. Pressure with single finger on gauze may
stop bleeding! Don’t remove gauzes, but from a packet of gauzes
on the wound remove the first ones and add more.
Obtain vascular (IV/IO) access (2
wide IV lines – grey or orange). On hypovolemia give 500 ml
NS (normal saline) or RL (Ringers - Lactated) and reassess
(we may give e.g. 1 – 2 Lt fluids) and also consider early
to transfuse blood (if not type available give Group O Rh
negative). Fluids should be warm (39 degrees C). On hypovolaemic
children give 20 ml/kg fluids. On no response, repeat 20 ml/kg
and if shock still remains give 15 ml/kg packed red blood
cells PRC to 10 ml/kg crystalloids or give 10 ml/kg whole
warmed blood. On hypovolaemic newborns give10 ml/kg fluids
over 5 – 10 min.
Connect on monitor if available. You can also take a 12 lead
ECG if indicated (e.g. blunt heart trauma/ contusion).
Check capillary refill time (normally is < 2 sec on 5
sec finger’s pulp pressure, alternatively check the forehead
between the eye brows, on black check the thenar eminence,
on babies check the sternum), check skin’s color (pale? mottled?
Cyanosis?) and temperature (are extremities pale, cold&
clammy?). About skin temperature, exclude cold weather (especially
if the patient was for a long time on cold that may cause
cold skin). Also exclude hypothermia.
In case of a pelvis fracture, immobilize it with a sheet,
or PAST (if available). Immobilize limb fracture. Give fluids
(NS normal saline, or RL Ringer’s Lactated, preferably warmed
on 39 degrees C) in the ambulance. Keep the SBP (systolic
BP) 80 –
90 mmHg with fluids. Don’t use D5W (5% dextrose).
·
D (Disability): GCS (Glasgow
Comma Scale), pupils (size and reaction to light) and abnormal
postures (stereotypical flexion or extension). Intubate if
GCS <_8. Use paralytic drugs if GCS > 3. In case you
haven’t got light a use the laryngoscope’s light!
·
E (Exposure/ Environment): Εxpose the patient (remove clothes) and check the skin for
wounds, rash etc. Log Roll the patient and check the back.
Next, prevent hypothermia (which will complicate coagulation)
with blankets. E, in hospital,
is also to call Expert!
·
Reassess the patient
every 5 min and when the patient deteriorates.
·
If the patient is critical
ill, immobilize on a long board (during log roll don’t forget
to see the back e.g. for injury) and transfer immediately
to the nearest most appropriate hospital. Reassess frequently
the patient.
·
If the patient isn’t
critical ill, perform secondary survey (examine from head
to toes), deal with isolated not threatening for life injuries
and fractures. Reassess. Then transfer.
Also, take history: AMPLE (Allergy, Medications, Past medical
History, Last meal, Events/ Environment).
Spinal immobilization may be omitted on a penetrating trauma
without neurological signs. However, if unsure, immobilize!
·
Contact with the receiving
hospital! Appraise them.
·
Don’t forget a thorough
documentation of the event on the patient’s medical files.
·
On a blunt trauma (e.g.
fall from stairs) in case the LOC (level of consciousness)
is decreased and GCS is < 15, immobilize the patient on
a long board. If LOC is not altered, but the patient has spinal
pain or tenderness or exhibits a neurological deficit or complaint
then also immobilize. If not, but there is a positive injury
mechanism, misleading/ trap injuries or difficulty on communication
with the patient or the patient is under alcohol or illicit
drugs influence or there is a wound that distracts you, then
immobilize the patient. If not, don’t immobilize. If unsure,
immobilize!
·
Laryngeal mask. Initially
we inflate the cuff to check if it inflates. We hold it like
a pencil. We put normal saline on the tube. We enter it in
the patient’s mouth until we feel it stops. We inflate he
cuff with tube size x 10 – 10 e.g. fore size 4 we inflate
with 4 x 10 – 10 = 30ml. Then, we ausculate the axillae and
the stomach and check the tube for water vapor. Next, we secure
the tube with a tape. For men we use size 4 – 5 (usually 5)
and for women (and small men) size 3 – 4 (usually 4).
·
We removed dust with
a brush and not by washing.
·
On electrocussion we
perform heart monitoring (and also check potassium levels).
·
Patients with hypothermia
and temperature < 32 degrees C will not have rigor. If
T (temperature) is < 28 degrees C there is possibility
for VF (ventricular fibrillation). VF may also occur by non
gentle manipulations on the patient! However, rapid reheat
on a stable hypothermic is also dangerous.
·
When you want to open
the airway (e.g. with jaw thrust) you can kneel and stabilize
the patient’s head between your knees!
·
On jaw thrust we place
the thumbs on the patient’s zygomatics or below the patient’s
mouth. We elevate the jaw to an up and front direction.
·
We place the oropharengeal
airway by 180 degrees rotation or with a tongue depressor,
without rotation. On children we use the tongue depressor
without rotation.
·
During BMV (bag mask
ventilation) with your lower fingers you can simultaneously
perform jaw thrust (in case you haven’t placed an oropharengeal
airway). During BMV it is essential to keep the mask tight.
Circle the mask with your thumb and index forming the letter
‘C’. The rest fingers (middle, ring and little finger) stabilize
the jaw and have the shape of the ‘reversed letter E’.
·
During jaw thrust or
chin lift, another rescuer immobilizes the head!
·
On chin lift the jaw
is moved to a frontal and (little bit) to a down direction.
·
The oropharengeal airway’s
proper length is estimated by fitting to the distance between
the mouth’s angle (incisors) and the angle of the mandible.
·
The nasopharyngeal airway’s
proper length is estimated by fitting to the distance between
the tip of the nose and the tragus of the ear. Alternatively,
the proper size fits to the patient’s little finger. Contraindicated
on cribiform or nasal or facial injury, or if you suspect
basal skull injury and also on apnea. Don’t forget to put
gel! Enter it with rotating movements.
·
Prolonged suction will
end to hypoxia!
·
Remove a dislocated artificial
denture, but keep a not dislocated because it will help keeping
the airway during BMV (bag mask ventilation).
·
Orotracheal intubation.
Use paralytics if GCS <3. Initially, assemble the equipment
(ET endotracheal tube, suction, laryngoscope, capnographer
– CO2 detector capnographer or esophageal detector, gel, syringe
and Magill’s forceps). Check that the cuff inflates properly
and check also the light of the laryngoscope. Pro – oxygenate
with 100% oxygen for 2 – 3min. Remove the C (cervical) – spine
colar and ask another rescuer to immobilize the head or you
can kneel and immobilize the head with your knees and simultaneously
intubate or sit and have the patient’s head between your legs!
Grab the laryngoscope with the left hand and enter the ET
(endotracheal) tube with the right hand. Enter the laryngoscope
in the RIGHT angle of the mouth, follow the tongue and elevate
it without touching the epiglottis (otherwise we will have
vagotony with bradycardia). Visualize the vocal cords and
then enter the ET tube with your right hand. The insertion
depth is about 24 cm on men and 22 cm on women.
Inflate the cuff with 5 – 8ml air. The intubation lasts max
30 sec or the time you hold your breath! Ausculate the axillae
(for equal bilateral breath sounds) and the stomach (for bubbles)
and check ET tube for water vapors. Secure the ET e.g. with
a tape. Place a capnographer (CO2 detector) (or oesophagal
CO2 detector device, however the most safe method to ascertain
the right placement of the tube is the CXR chest X’ Ray).
Use curved blade (size 3 or 4).
On children < 8 years old don’t use ET (endotracheal tube)
with cuff, but an uncuffed ET. Straight blade is used on infants
(< 1 years old) and neonates. On children premedicate with
atropine (to prevent with bradycardia) and, in case of head
trauma, with lidocaine. The size of ET tube on adults is 8
– 9 mmID on men and 7 – 8 mmID on women. In case you have
another rescuer, you can perform Sellick’s maneuver during
intubation, in order to prevent aspiration. However, if aspiration
occurs, release the Sellick maneuver; otherwise you may cause
oesophagal perforation. In that case perform suction.
In case the patient is on a sitting position (e.g. in the
car) and there is not a need for emergency evacuation, you
can perform intubation, however another rescuer needs to immobilize
manually the head and also during intubation you must hold
the ET (endotracheal) tube and laryngoscope with the opposite
hands i.e. with your right hand hold the laryngoscope and
with the left the ET.
·
Percutaneous (endo) tracheal
intubation PTV/ needle cricothyroidotomy. A rescuer immobilizes
the head. With your 1 hand immobilize the larynx and with
the other hand you enter on the cricoids cartilage a wide
(14 G) IV catheter connected with a syringe which contains
normal saline.
You continuously withdraw the planger of the syringe and
when you aspirate air you are in the trachea. Then you enter
1cm inside. You remove the syringe and then you remove the
needle, and the plastic part of the catheter remains in. You
connect with an oxygen tube and then connect the tube with
a 3 way. Connect the 3 way via an oxygen tube to an oxygen
supply. Periodically you open and close the 3 way in order
the inspiration to expiration ratio to be 1 :
4.
In case you do not wave a 3 way, you can make a hole on the
oxygen tube and periodically obstruct it with your thumb to
the above ratio. The PTV is effective only for 45 min, so
seek soon a permanent airway e.g. tracheotomy.
·
Before Log Roll perform
ABCDs. On a supine patient that needs Log Roll the first thing
is 1 rescuer to immobilize the head and another rescuer to
align the patient’s limbs. A 3rd rescuer brings
the long board opposite from the side that the patient’s head
is turned (if it looks laterally). The rescuer that immobilizes
the head gives the order (‘1,2 ,3’) for the log – roll. The
rescuer that holds the long board initially supports it with
his/her knees and during the log roll slowly he/she removes
them. When the patient is on a lateral position a rescuer
looks quickly the back!
The 2 rescuers that hold the patient with a specific way:
the 1 rescuer has the upper hand holding the
patient’s arm and the lower hand holding the patient’s pelvis.
The other rescuer has the upper hand holding the patient’s
forearm (crossed to the other rescuer’s arm) and the other
hand holding the patient’s tibia (during log roll the rescuer
holds the tip of both sides of the patient’s trousers or has
the patients legs tied with a tape in order both legs to move
as 1 during log roll).
When the patient is supine on the long board, in case the
patient is not on a proper place, but has slipped down, we
can drag the patient up. This is performed by 2 rescuers.
A 3rd immobilizes the head. The 1st
rescuer holds the patient’s axillae and the 2nd holds the patient’s pelvis. The 2 rescuers are
below the patient. With an order, the 2 rescuers drag the
patient up, in order to put the patient on
a proper place on the long board.
·
We tie the patient on
the long board with a specific way. One belt goes below the
knees, 1 above the knees, 1 on the pelvis, 2 belts cross the
chest. Also we pass a tape thru the cervical collar’s ‘jaw’
(avoid touching with the tape the patient’s jaw). We tie the
belts on their other side in the holes of the long board’s
handles. We also place a cervical collar.
First we place the chest belt, next the pelvis, next we immobilize
the cervix (collar, sides, and tape on the cervical collar’s
‘jaw’) and last we place the leg belt. We tie the belts not
very hard, but in that way that our finger passes below. The
patient’s upper extremities are outside the belts (in order
not to obstruct the IV lines). They may be tied (not hard)
with gauze and we may place IV lines. Besides the patient’s
head we prefer shoft material (e.g. with gauze or towels)
and not sand bags or normal saline fluid containers.
We also put sheet between the patient’s legs and on the outer
aspect of both legs. We
also may use a towel below the patient’s head in order to
keep the head on line. Finally, we stop the cervical immobilization
only when the pelvis and the thorax have immobilized.
·
If the patient is prone,
we initially immobilize the head (before we talk to the patient)
and next we take the ABCDs. To log roll the patient, we place
the long board and turn the patient opposite to the side he/she
looks (has the head turned). The long board is placed just
in front of the 2 rescuer’s (that hold the patient and are
kneeled) bodies and they stabilize it with their knees. During
log roll, they remove slowly their knees.
·
The cervical collar’s
size is estimated by the distance (with our hand) between
the patient’s jaw angle and the upper limit of the trapezoid
(trapezius) muscle.
·
In case the patient is
on an erect position (stands up), 3 rescues immobilize the
patient on a long board. The 1st rescuer immobilizes
the head (before anyone talks to the patient) and another
rescuer approaches with the long board vertically to the floor
and places it on the patient’s body and simultaneously takes
the head’s immobilization. Then the other 2 rescuers stand
on each side of the patient (i.e. the one is on the left and
the other on the right) and with their one hand hold the long
board (from its handle) above the patients shoulder and with
the other hand hold the long board by passing their hand below
the patient’s axilla. The 3rd rescuer immobilizes
the patient’s head.
In case we have 2 rescuers, they stay on the patient’s side
and immobilize with their 1 hand the patient’s head (by holding
it with their palms on the side of the head) and with their
other hand hold the long board (from one of its handles) by
passing their hand below the patient’s axilla.
·
On a child that needs
immobilization on a long board we place a folded sheet below
its back in order to come below its back and keep its spinal
cord to a neutral aligned position, because children (and
especially babies) have larger head.
·
In case the patient’s
head is on an abnormal position we try to align it. However,
if the patient has pain or muscle spasm or exhibits neurological
signs, such as numbness, we leave the head on its previous
position that did not appear neurological signs and we immobilize
it e.g. with a sheet or a towel.
·
On a baby that we found
on a baby’s seat inside a crashed car, we initially immobilize
its head manually (we approach the baby from the font and
not the back, in order not to frighten it). We don’t put collar
on babies, but a towel around its head (without suffocating
it).
·
We hold the baby’s seat
and remove it out from the car and place it besides the long
board (in which we have placed a folded towel in order to
come below the baby’s back an keep its spine at neutral aligned
position, because babies have big head). Then 3 rescuers transfer
the baby from its seat to the long board, holding the 1st
one the baby from its axillae, the 2nd one from
its pelvis and the 3rd one immobilizing its head.
·
A patient is found on
a sitting position, touching a wall with his/her back. Initially
a rescuer (before he/she talks to the patient) immobilizes
manually the patient’s head. Another rescuer assesses ABCDs.
Next, 2 rescuers stabilize the patient holding with their
one hand the patient’s chest and with the other the patients
back, and carefully they move the patient to the long board.
The head immobilization is kept until the patient is completely
tied on the long board.
·
In case the patient has
a fracture at his/her arm, we palpate the radial pulse and
ask if the patient has numbness/ paresthesia at his fractured
extremity. We also check the capillary refill time on the
finger of the fractured extremity. When the patient is immobilized
and tied on the long board, we perform traction of the extremity
and immobilization on a splinter. We recheck pulse and check
for sensory deficits (such as numbness) and capillary refill
time. In case after traction we lose pulse and we have sensory
deficits (e.g. numbness or paresthesia), we return the extremity
to the previous position that pulse and sensation was OK.
·
Helmet removal: the 1st
rescuer comes above the patients head, holds with both hands
the helmet at its side (with his/her fingers holding the lower
part of the helmet) and brings it on a neutral position. Then,
the 2nd rescuer unties the helmet’s strap (or cuts
it) and opens the helmet’s screen. Then the 1st
rescuer lifts the helmet until he/she sees the patient’s nose.
Then he/she lifts carefully the helmet in order to release
the nose and with lateral movements he/she releases the whole
helmet. The 2nd rescuer, in the above procedure
of removal, with his/her 1 hand holds and immobilizes the
patient’s jaw and with the other holds the patient’s cervix
and occipit.
·
On a patient that is
trapped inside a car after a car accident we perform emergency
evacuation in case the patient is critical ill (according
to ABCDs, e.g. on shock), or there is danger (e.g. from a
fire), or other patients in more serious medical condition
need to be reached first and the patient is an obstacle on
reaching them.
·
On a car accident, in
case a patient needs emergency evacuation, we don’t put oxygen,
neither we administer fluids. However, we may place oropharengeal
airway and cervical collar.
·
The golden period from
trauma scene to the OR (operation room) is 1 h. That means
that the ambulance has to stay on the scene maximum 10 min.
·
Ideally an ambulance
arrives on a trauma scene in 10 min, stays there for max 10min,
and transfers the patient in hospital in 10 min. There the
patient is resuscitated, stabilized and in max 30 min (or
sooner) and reaches the OR door in 1 hour from the trauma.
·
A break of the car’s
screen like a star indicates head/cervical/spinal injury.
·
A bended steering wheel
indicates heart/lungs/ big vessels and abdominal injuries.
·
A frontal car collision
with an up and front direction of the driver indicates head,
spinal, chest, pelvis and abdomen injury. The down and frontal
direction of the driver indicates pelvis, hip (dislocation)
and lower limbs fractures.
·
On a posterior car collision
suspect cervical injury (from a low head pillow/ supporter
or a second collision to a stable object).
·
A lateral car collision
indicates neck, shoulder etc. injury.
·
A motorbike collision
to a car may cause bilateral femoral fractures, or knocking
down on the front part of the car or leg trapping on the car’s
side.
·
On knee/lower extremity
injuries exclude poplietal artery rupture.
·
A pedestrian may be knocked
down by a car. On an adult the injuries are usually laterally
(because the adults react and try to avoid the car). On a
child the collision is frontal with pelvis, abdomen and chest
injuries and also the kid may be fall to the road and run
over by the same or another car.
·
On a penetrating trauma
with knife that is left intact into the body, stabilize the
knife with elastic tapes in order not to be moved during transferring
to hospital.
·
Hypothermia complicates
coagulation. Prevent it! Therapeutic hypothermia is used only
after arrest on patients with coma, however is not used on
trauma.
·
Children may have severe
lung contusion without rib fractures. So, rib fractures on
children indicate severe injuries (e.g. lung contusion).
·
On the elderly, the injury
may be a consequence of an acute medical condition e.g. an
old person may suffer from a MI (heart attack) and cause a
car accident.
·
Flail chest means >
2 ribs fracture with have as a consequence opposite movement
of chest on breathing.
·
An arrhythmia may pre
– existed or may be caused by heart contusion or be ought
to an ACS (acute coronary syndrome). The last 2 may coexist
and also may cause both increased Troponins and ECG ischemic
changes.
·
Cover a bowel or other
splachnic organ with warm (normal saline on 39 degrees C)
wet gauzes.
·
A pregnant with abruption
placenta may have blood per vaginum.
·
On head trauma exclude
and treat hyper/ hypoglycemia, increased ICP (intracranial
pressure), hypotension and hypo/ hypercapnia.
·
Basal skull fracture
may be exhibited with leakage of CSF thru nose or ear, blood
from the ear and later (e.g. after a few hours) raccoon eyes
and Battle sign. CSF leakage can be suspected if the leaking
fluid from the nose or ear makes a halo on a shine paper.
·
Increased ICP (intracranial
pressure) may manifest with decreasing GCS score >_2 degrees,
non reactive pupils, pupil dilation (anisokoria), hemiplegia,
hemiparesis and Cushing triad (increased BP, decreased HR
and irregular breathing). It may result to herniation.
·
Treatment of increased
ICP and impending herniation is with bed elevation (max 30
degrees, don’t do it in hypotension), mannitol and perhaps
Lasix (don’t give any of them on hypotension, but treat first
hypotension e.g. with fluids and perhaps with operation),
sedation, paralysis with barbirutates (not on hypotension),
and controlled mild hyperventilation (Keep Pa CO2 35 – 45mmHg).
On head trauma on RSI use lidocaine on premedication and as
anesthetic use etomidate (if not hypotension).
·
On trauma and especially
on fractures and burns remove jewerely and rings from patient’s
hand.
·
On burns place gauzes.
However, wet gauzes may cause hypothermia on burns> 10%
BSA.
·
Burns usually don’t cause
shock early. Exclude first hypovolemia from internal or external
injuries.
·
On suspected inhalation
burns intubate early.
·
For estimating BSA% on
burns remember the rule of 9%. On adults the head is 9%, the
upper extremity 9%, the lower extremity 18%, the frontal trunk
(chest, abdomen) is 18%, the posterior trunk (back) is 18%
and the genitals are 1%. On children the head is 18% and the lower extremity
is 13,5%. Also the patients palm is 1%.
·
Don’t forget tetanus
immunization on all trauma patients, burns, frostbites, lacerations,
animal or human bites, stings and electrocution.
APPENDIX:
SIGNS OF HYPOVOLAEMIC SHOCK
Signs of hypovolaemic shock (haemorrhage - external or internal
blood loss; or severe dehydration e.g. on severe diarrhea
or vomiting) include: tachycardia (if not on β' blockers or
pacemaker!), fast thready pulse, narrowed pulse pressure (Systolic
BP - diastolic BP), weak peripheral pulses, tachypnea, decreased
level of concioussness (LOC), decreased urine output (adults
< 0.5 ml/kg/h, children 1ml/kg/h, infants 2 ml/kg/h), decreased
capillary refill time (>2 sec), hypotension (late, with
> 30% volume loss on adults and > 40% on children),
cool pale skin, diaphoresis (not on dehydration); also decreased
skin turgor (unreliable on the elderly) and dry mucus membranes
(e.g. dry tongue) on dehydration.
NOTE
Some
information in this text is empirical and its reliability
can't be ascertained. It is suggested to search official medical
articles, books and guidelines in order to ascertain the medical
information of this text.
All
the medical procedures and drug administration mentioned in
this text should be done only under a senior doctor's consultancy.
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M.J., Robertson C.E., Oxford Handbook of Emergency Medicine,
Oxford Medical Publications, 3rd edition, 2006.
3) Ramrakha P., Moore K., Oxford Handbook of Acute
Medicine, Oxford Medical Publications, 2nd edition, published
2004, reprinted 2005.
4) ALS (Advanced Life Support), European Resuscitation
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2006.
6) Llewelyn H., Aun Ang H., Lewis K., Al – Abdulla
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Publications, 2006.
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