EMCrit Podcast

Severe Pediatric Trauma with Michael McGonigal

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EMCrit Podcast

Scott D. Weingart, MD

New York, NY

Description: In this podcast we take upstairs care downstairs by bringing ICU level critical care to the bedside in the Emergency Department

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Severe Pediatric Trauma with Michael McGonigal

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I got to speak with Michael McGonigal, MD of the Trauma Professional’s Blog about severe pediatric trauma in the ED.

Pediatric Glasgow Score Best eye response: (E)
  1. Eyes opening spontaneously
  2. Eye opening to speech
  3. Eye opening to pain
  4. No eye opening or response
Best motor responses: (M)
  1. Infant moves spontaneously or purposefully
  2. Infant withdraws from touch
  3. Infant withdraws from pain
  4. Abnormal flexion to pain for an infant (decorticate response)
  5. Extension to pain (decerebrate response)
  6. No motor response
Best verbal response: (V)
  1. Smiles, oriented to sounds, follows objects, interacts.
  2. Cries but consolable, inappropriate interactions.
  3. Inconsistently inconsolable, moaning.
  4. Inconsolable, agitated.
  5. No verbal response.

Any combined score of less than eight represents a significant risk of mortality.

Articles Mentioned in the Episode
  • Cerebral hemodynamic predictors of poor 6-month Glasgow Outcome Score in severe pediatric brain injury. J Neurotrauma 26(5):657-663, 2009.
  • CPR for bradycardia with poor perfusion vs pulseless cardiac arrest. Pediatrics 124(6): 1541-1548, 2009.
  • Osmolar therapy in pediatric  traumatic brain injury. Crit Care Med 40(1): 208-215, 2012.
The Trauma Professional’s Blog

Want to read more of Dr. McGonigal’s stuff; hell yeah you do. Go on over to the The Trauma Professional’s Blog.

Now, on to the podcast…

You just read the post: Severe Pediatric Trauma with Michael McGonigal from EMCrit Blog - Emergency Department Critical Care.

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