Lacerations Guide

How To Heal Head Lacerations Section


 

|

How To Heal Head Lacerations Best Seller

Buy it Now!


How To Heal Head Lacerations Navigation


First Aid Guide Home Page
List of lacerations Articles
Other First Aid Related Articles
More lacerations Resources
Tell A Friend about us
Sitemap

How To Heal Head Lacerations Best Products


Other First Aid Related Sections - Guides

First Aid
Allergic Reactions
Lacerations
Bites
First Aid Kit
Medical Care
Broken Bones
First Aid Supplies
Punctures
Bruises
Fractures
Scrapes
Burns
Illness
Sprains


Lacerations And Wounds |
Vulva Lacerations |
Lacerations At Bali |
Complications With Spleenic Lacerations |
Lacerations And Dermabond |
Fatal Lacerations |
Types Of Wounds Lacerations Injury |
Lacerations On Cartoons |
Treatment Diabetes Foot Lacerations |
Lacerations Of The Genital Tract |
Dog Eyeball Lacerations |
Second Degree Lacerations |
Lacerations Of The Genitals |
Wrist Lacerations |
Keikos Ice Lacerations |


"Chess is life."

by Bobby Fischer

"I have never met a vampire personally, but I don't know what might happen tomorrow."

by Bela Lugosi

"Every dog must have his day."

by Jonathan Swift

"Don't be a marshmallow. Walk the street with us into history. Get off the sidewalk. Stop being vegetables. Work for Justice. Viva the boycott!"

by Dolores Huerta

"I have always thought it would be a blessing if each person could be blind and deaf for a few days during his early adult life. Darkness would make him appreciate sight; silence would teach him the joys of sound."

by Helen Keller



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on lacerations
Email:
First Name:



Main How To Heal Head Lacerations Sponsors


 

Latest How To Heal Head Lacerations Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on How To Heal Head Lacerations!



 

Welcome to Lacerations Guide

 

How To Heal Head Lacerations Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Hepatic Trauma: Liver Lacerations

from:

Every year thousands of people are severely injured in automobile accidents. Hepatic injuries and more specifically, liver lacerations are most common in auto accidents where there are decelerations injuries. Most often there is a crash and the body is thrown forward into the steering wheel. With that, the right rib cage is fractured, and the internal organs are severely injured. There may be a collapsed lung (pneumothorax), liver lacerations, and other organ damage.

Blunt or penetrating trauma is the most common cause of liver lacerations. When there is an auto accident, the blunt force of the steering wheel is focused over the 7th and 9th rib, which often fracture and the end result is a punctured or lacerated liver. The injury will be characterized by pain in the upper right quadrant of the abdomen. There may be bleeding into the peritoneal cavity which may cause enough pressure and irritation to cause pain and tenderness in all 4 quadrants of the abdomen. Upon admission to an emergency department, the physician will order X-rays to look for evidence of liver lacerations and other injuries through the verification of rib fractures. In addition to liver lacerations, there may be blunt force trauma to the liver, lungs, and kidneys, which will all have to be evaluated and addressed by the physician and or surgeon.

In an emergency situation, there may not be time to schedule a CT scan; however after the crisis is over, the physician may order a CT scan to evaluate the overall condition of the liver and other internal organs. Scanning the injured area with a CT scanner will identify areas that have been lacerated or otherwise traumatized. So much more can be seen with a CT than in an X-ray or with the trained eye of the surgeon.

After medical or surgical intervention has taken place to mend the liver laceration, the doctor may still be concerned about internal bleeding. The patient will be evaluated every 15 minutes for the first hour and every 30 minutes for the second hour. If there is still evidence of internal bleeding it will show up in the vital signs, and there may also be increased pain in the wounded area called rebound pain. Rebound pain is related to increased pressure secondary to internal bleeding—the pain gets worse instead of better after pain medications are administered.

Internal bleeding caused from liver lacerations is a medical emergency. The victim often will quickly go into hypovolemic shock caused by rapid blood loss. The body responds to hypovolemic, or in this case, more commonly known as hemorrhagic shock by lowering the blood pressure. Shock is a life threatening emergency and must be treated immediately. The source of internal bleeding must be found and corrected. This will often mean surgical intervention to repair the liver, as well as repairing any fractures that have inadvertently caused the injury. Once the repair is done, the body will start to heal itself. Platelets will form causing the wounded area to clot off to seal the wound, so that healing can take place.




 


 


 


 


 


 


 




Other How To Heal Head Lacerations Related Articles

Horse Lacerations
Labia Lacerations
Pictures Of Lacerations Of The Tongue
Leg Lacerations
Lip Lacerations

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


How To Heal Head Lacerations Specific Links

How To Heal Head Lacerations News