Title: COMBINED RADIATION INJURIES
1COMBINED RADIATION INJURIES
Module XIV
2Introduction-effects of nuclear bomb and nuclear
accident
- The detonation of atomic bombs over Hiroshima
and Nagasaki on 6 9 August 1945
Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident on 26 April
1986
3Classification
- According to radiation dose combined with other
factors, CRI can be classified as - thermal CRI external/internal irradiation with
thermal burns - mechanical CRI external/internal irradiation
with wound or fracture, or haemorrhage - chemical CRI external/internal irradiation with
chemical burns or chemical intoxication
4Predicted distribution of injuries from
nuclear explosion
- Single injuries 30 to 40
- Ionizing radiation
- (including fallout) 15 to 20
- Burns 15 to 20
- Wounds Up to 5
5Predicted distribution of injuries from nuclear
explosion
- Combined injuries 65 to 70
- Irradiation, burns, wounds 20
- Irradiation, burns 40
- Irradiation, wounds 5
- Wounds, burns 5
6Medical Management
- Triage
- Emergency care
- Definitive care
7Triage
- In radiation accident or nuclear detonation, many
patients can suffer from burns and traumatic
injuries in addition to radiation - Initial triage of combined injury patients based
on conventional injuries - Treat associated injuries first
8Emergency procedures
- First actions standard emergency medical
procedures - Ventilation
- Circulation
- Stop haemorrhage
- Decontamination after stabilization
- Survivable radiation injury not acutely life
threatening
9Secondary assessment of combined injury
- Primary surgical responsibilities
- Stabilize
- Set surgical priorities
- Perform surgery
- Secondary responsibilities
- Manage post-operative course
- Assess radiation exposure in post-operative or
post-stabilization period
10Prognosis
- Prognosis for all combined injuries worse than
for radiation injury alone - Infections much more difficult to control
wounds and fractures heal more slowly
11Burns and radiation
Boy was 1.5 miles from the detonation of the
Nagasaki atomic bomb
12Radiation and burns
Radiation burns on Japanese atomic bomb victim
13Sytemic response to major burn injury
- Early period
- Shock with hypovolemia
- Gastrointestinal ileus
- Oligouria
- After adequate resuscitation
- Hyperdynamic state
- Increased cardiac output
- Diuresis
- Peripheral catabolism
14Causes of burn deaths
- Direct results of accident 13
- Sepsis
45 - Organ /system failure
- (burn shock, acute renal failure) 41
- Iatrogenic intervention 1
15Expected mortality from thermal injuries
Burn area ( of body surface area) Expected mortality
gt 30 100
10-30 Survive with specific treatment
lt10 Survive even without treatment
16Combined effects of simultaneous whole body
irradiation and burns on rats
17Burn therapy
- Topical antimicrobials
- Early grafting
- Stimulation of the bone marrow and possibly of
skin regeneration with cytokines
18Principles of controlling infection in burn care
- Use antimicrobials
- Support immune mechanisms
- Eliminate infection reservoirs
- Suppress infection transfer
19Suggestions
- Full thickness burns ideal bacterial culture
media - excise and graft - Make no change in indications for escharotomy
- Partial thickness burns could be treated with
aggressive topical therapy avoid nosocomial
sepsis
20Initial surgery
Major skin necrosis on both legs, extending to t
subcutaneous tissue
Complete graft healing after 8 days
Epifascial excision of necrotic skin
21Treatment of Contaminated Burn Injuries
- Gentle decontamination after stabilization
- Passive tetanus immunization even in previously
immunized patients
22Chernobyl victims - classification
23Chernobyl conclusions
- Radiation burns frequent
- Burns over 50 of body surface led to death in 19
out of 28 cases - Internal contamination was present in most of
patients, however, it was significant just in a
few cases. - Sepsis uniform cause of death
- BMT very limited indications
- Some radiation burns did not re-epithelialize and
required surgery
24Wounds and radiation
25Trauma repair
26Effects of persistent pancytopenia
- Decreased oxygen capacity
- Lack of release of new erythrocytes and aging of
red cell population - Decreased clotting ability
- Megakaryocytes unable to replicate, plateletes
consumed - Altered wound healing
- Fibroblasts damaged by irradiation do not
replicate at normal rate - Immunosuppression
27Combined injury immunological effects
- Bone marrow suppression
- Consumption of inflamatory reserves
- Disruption of epidermal barriers
- Depression of reticuloendothelial system
28Experience from Hiroshima and Nagasaki patients
- Complications developed 2 to 3 weeks after
exposure characteristic of bone marrow depression
effects - Open wounds stopped healing, haemorrhaged
- Many patients died of sepsis
29Wound problems
- Wound colonization
- Failed delayed primary closure
- Wound sepsis
- Delay in healing
- Occasional amputation
- Radiologically contaminated wound
30Treatment
- Control haemorrhage
- Debride extensively
- Repair vital structures
- Irrigate
- Consider wound closure
31Timing of surgical management
32Combined radiation injuryReview-I
- Diagnosis, treatment and prognosis are much more
complex in CRI - Haematological indices and other laboratory tests
can be modified in a way that makes diagnosis of
radiation component difficult
33Combined radiation injuryReview-II
- Because radiation injury is not immediately life
threatening, initial care should address
emergency medical procedures for ventilation,
perfusion and treatment of haemorrhage
34Combined radiation injuryReview-III
- Patients with multiple injuries complicated by
radiation injury require more aggressive
treatment than non-irradiated patients - Combined injury requires all urgent surgery to be
completed within 48 hours of irradiation