Abstract
Post-traumatic hypoxia can be due to different causes, namely airway problems, pneumothorax, hemothorax, lung contusion, flail chest, traumatic diaphragmatic injuries (TDI), aspiration due to low sensorium, a respiratory paradox in cervical spine injury, severe hypotension, etc., It is a great challenge to identify the cause of hypoxia in a trauma setting because the contributing factors can be multiple or can be a remote cause, which is often missed out. Here, we describe a 50-year-old female who presented to our emergency department with Post-traumatic hypoxia whose sensorium, blood pressure, chest X-ray, E-FAST computed tomography of brain, and other baseline investigation were completely normal, diagnosed later as TDI with the help of diaphragmatic ultrasound and computed tomography of thorax.
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CITATION STYLE
Mahalingam, S., Rajendran, G., Balassoundaram, V., & Nathan, B. (2021). Need for a change – Extended-fast to extended diaphragmatic-fast. Journal of Medical Ultrasound, 29(3), 215–217. https://doi.org/10.4103/JMU.JMU_104_20
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