Title: AMPUTEE CARE
1AMPUTEE CARE
- Michael L. Place, MD
- USAFP
- March 2006
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3AMPUTEE CARE
- Michael L. Place, MD
- USAFP
- March 2006
4POST-OPERATIONAL CASUALTY CARE
- Michael L. Place, MD
- USAFP
- March 2006
5LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Describe the common challenges of war casualties
after release from tertiary care - Explain the role of family physicians in caring
for this select population - Discuss the affects of traumatic brain injuries
- Explain the management of amputated limb pain
6AMPUTEE HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
- Civil War nearly 21,000
- WWI over 4,000
- WWII almost 15,000
- Korean Conflict over 1,000 traumatic
amputations - Vietnam estimated 6,000 by VA records and
approximately 3 in the Emergency War Surgery
Handbook - Gulf War - 15
7SCOPE
- 381 patients with major limb amputations
- 59 patients with multiple limbs (15)
- 4 patients with 3 limb involvement
- 10 patients with hip disarticulation
- 104 patients with upper extremity involvement
(27) - Amputees comprise 2.2 percent of wounded Soldiers
8MEDICAL EVACUATION
Follow up at WRAMC or at the local VA or
civilian facility for final prosthetic fitting.
12 BAMC
168 WRAMC 7 BAMC
From LRMC 7 San Diego NMC 1 Camp Lejeune 1
Camp Pendleton 1 Ft Irwin 1 Ft Campbell 2
MAMC
39 to Bethesda 24 to WRAMC 2 to BAMC
OIF 216
LRMC 211 OIF 22 OEF
OEF 22
9RELEVENCE TO USAFP
- Concerted effort to retain in military
- Multidisciplinary approach required for
successful management - PT for general conditioning early and extensive
involvement in LE amputation - OT hand/UE injuries including assessment for
brachial plexus injuries that limit shoulder
girdle - Prosthetics specialists
- Neuro consider EMG if clinical evidence of
weakness or plexopathy - Physiatry and Pain specialists for pain
management - Mental Health concomitant stress reaction,
survivors remorse, depression, generalized
anxiety disorder and PTSD common
10COMMON ISSUES
- Acute concerns (tertiary discharge to 6 months)
- Pain Management
- Traumatic Brain Injuries
- Grieving and Reintegration
- Physical Rehabilitation
- Chronic Concerns (gt 6 months)
- Stump pain
- Phantom Limb Pain
- PTSD
11PAIN PRIMER
- Neurophysiology of pain
- Transduction peripheral terminals of primary
afferent nerves result in energy transformation
into electrical activity - Transmission electrical activity travels
through the nervous system - Modulation process of altering the neural
activity while in transmission - Perception the subjective accumulation of all
input - 3 Primary receptors (mu, kappa, delta), with mu
responsible for generalized analgesia - Mu1 has similar affinity for all opioid peptides
and results in supraspinal analgesia (euphoria,
miosis, etc.,) - Mu2 has greater selectivity for morphine and
results in sedation, ileus, respiratory
depression - Naloxone blocks mu receptors
12PAIN CONTROL
- Opioids are the drug of choice acutely
- - methadone, fentanyl, long acting morphine and
oxycodone - - acts centrally, spinal cord and peripherally
- - select one long acting and one short acting
med (avoid altering types and routes of admin
like pca, iv push, oral prn) - NSAIDs essential in bone pain/amputees
- Gabapentin and TCAs for nerve pain
- Alpha blockers (clonidine) for neuromodulation
- SSRIs and other adjuvants
13TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
- Injured in IED blast, skull fx requiring
craniectomy at Balad - 6 days in WRAMC ICU, sometimes mistaking nurses
for CIA agents or believing he was back in
Baghdad. - On Ward 58, he became alert enough to realize
that he was having difficulty speaking. - "I called for the nurse. . . . I kept on just
trying to say something, but I couldn't really
say anything," Emme recalled. The nurse asked him
questions and waited patiently for him to answer.
Finally, she left to check on other patients.
About a half hour later, she returned, and Emme
managed to articulate his message "My head
hurts."
14TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
- 22 of OIF casualties per Joint Theater Trauma
Registry (vice 12 from Vietnam) - Over 450 diagnosed JAN03-FEB05
- 56 of admitted blast casualties suffering TBI
- Severity based on GCS, length of loss of
consciousness and post traumatic amnesia (PTA)
15DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA
Pathophysiology - postulated as axonal damage
without disruption leading to impaired axonal
transport - potential role of release of
excitatory neurotransmitters and free radicals
with secondary injury Potential increased risk
with previous TBI
16TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
- Clinical manifestations may emerge over time
- - mood changes (depression, anxiety,
impulsiveness, emotional outbursts) - - cognitive disturbances (memory, problem
solving, language and attention), - - headaches
- - personality changes
- - sleep disturbances
- - photophbia and phonophobia
- Seizures generally early (commonly in first
hours) and increase risk of post-traumatic
epilepsy to more than 25 - Recommend tailoring of treatment (amitriptyline
or propranolol for HA, donepezil for cognitive
impairments, SSRIs for irritability and outburst,
valproate for migraines and behavioral issues) - Unaware of any published data on long term risk
of post-concussive syndrome in this population,
although civilian models of mild TBI (GCS 13-15)
range from 30-80 w/ PCS
17POST-CONCUSSIVE SYNDROME
Consider use of standardized instrument for
documentation Postconcussion Symptom Checklist
(Gouvier, Cubic, et al., 1992) or Kennedy-Johnson
Post-Concussive Scale (Cicerone and Kalmar, 1995)
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22OTHER ACUTECONCERNS
- Normal grief process exacerbated by TBI and
psychosocial factors - Oftentimes limited support systems and coping
techniques - Depression common and should be routinely
screened - Rehabilitation requires significant patience and
dedication necessitating celebrating incremental
goals
23CHRONIC CONCERNS
- Stump pain
- peripherally mediated
- evaluate for skin breakdown due to prosthesis or
neuroma - Phantom limb pain
- perceived pain in missing extremity
- centrally mediated
- PTSD
- No data to date on Chronic Regional Pains
Syndrome (RSD) or contractures - Evaluate for hearing damage (1 cause of medical
boards post combat)
24 PHANTOM LIMB PAIN
- Up to 50-80 of all amputees experience
- Little quality data no comparative data of
treatment modalities for traumatic amputees - Modalities to attempt include
- - regional nerve blocks
- - TENS
- - salmon calcitonin
- - massage
- - narcotics
- - topicals (DMSO, capsaicin, lidocaine, etc.,)
- Must rule out poorly fitting prosthetics, bone
spur/heterotopic ossification
25HETEROTOPIC OSSIFICATION
- Primary cause of stump pain is poorly fitting
prosthesis - R/O heterotopic ossification, osteomyelitis
26EXTREME MAKEOVERHOME EDITION
27RESOURCES
- Military Severely Injured Center
- Military One Source
- www.painfoundation.org
28RETURN TO DUTY
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