Creates trauma surgery documentation with injury severity scoring and damage control principles. Use when documenting trauma operations, calculating ISS, or recording damage control sequences.
Creates trauma surgery documentation with injury severity scoring and damage control principles. Use when documenting trauma operations, calculating ISS, or recording damage control sequences.
Creates trauma surgery documentation with injury severity scoring and damage control principles. Use when documenting trauma operations, calculating ISS, or recording damage control sequences.
Creates trauma surgery documentation with injury severity scoring and damage control principles.
Why This Skill Exists
Trauma is the leading cause of death for Americans under age 45, and trauma surgery documentation faces unique challenges: operations are emergent with no preoperative planning, patients often cannot provide history, injuries are frequently multi-system, and the documentation must simultaneously support clinical care, injury severity scoring (ISS), trauma registry reporting, and medicolegal defense. The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS-COT) requires Level I and Level II trauma centers to maintain comprehensive trauma registries with standardized injury coding, and verification site reviews specifically examine documentation quality.
Damage control surgery โ a staged approach where initial surgery controls hemorrhage and contamination, followed by ICU resuscitation and delayed definitive repair โ requires meticulous documentation of each operative phase, the clinical rationale for staging, and the resuscitation endpoints between stages. Poor documentation leads to inaccurate ISS calculation (affecting trauma center verification, research, and benchmarking), coding errors, and medicolegal vulnerability in the high-litigation trauma environment.
Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)
What was the mechanism of injury (blunt, penetrating, blast, burn, other)? Default: [VERIFY โ obtain from trauma team leader]
What were the prehospital vitals and GCS? Default: [VERIFY โ obtain from EMS report]
What injuries were identified on primary and secondary survey? Default: [VERIFY]
Was the patient taken directly to the OR or was imaging obtained first? Default: [VERIFY]
Is this a damage control surgery (DCS) or definitive repair? Default: [VERIFY]
What is the patient's hemodynamic status and resuscitation status? Default: [VERIFY]
What blood products have been administered? Default: [VERIFY โ from massive transfusion protocol record]
What is the trauma activation level (full, modified, consult)? Default: [VERIFY]
Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) and Injury Severity Score (ISS)
Document each injury with its AIS code and severity:
AIS Severity
Description
Examples
1 โ Minor
Superficial injury
Skin abrasion, minor contusion
2 โ Moderate
Reversible injury, not life-threatening
Simple fracture, small pneumothorax
3 โ Serious
Not immediately life-threatening, potential long-term sequelae
Open fracture, major hemothorax, bowel perforation
4 โ Severe
Life-threatening, survival probable
Liver laceration Grade III-IV, flail chest with contusion
5 โ Critical
Life-threatening, survival uncertain
Aortic injury, massive hepatic disruption, severe TBI
6 โ Unsurvivable
Virtually unsurvivable
Decapitation, total body disruption
ISS Calculation
ISS uses the three most severely injured body regions (from six: head/neck, face, chest, abdomen/pelvic contents, extremities/pelvic girdle, external):
ISS = (highest AIS in region 1)ยฒ + (highest AIS in region 2)ยฒ + (highest AIS in region 3)ยฒ
ISS ranges: 1-75 (any single AIS 6 automatically = ISS 75)
ISS โฅ16 = major trauma (associated with >10% mortality)
ISS โฅ25 = severe trauma (associated with >25% mortality)
Document each injury, its AIS code, the body region, and the calculated ISS. This feeds directly into the trauma registry.
Step 2: Trauma Operative Report โ Special Elements
In addition to standard operative report elements, trauma operative reports must include:
Indication Section
Mechanism and time of injury
Prehospital and ED vitals (include lowest SBP and GCS)
FAST exam results (positive/negative, which quadrant)
Imaging findings that prompted surgery (or documentation that patient was too unstable for imaging)
Hemodynamic status at decision to operate (e.g., "Pt remained hypotensive with SBP 70s despite 2 units pRBC; decision made for emergent exploratory laparotomy")
Findings Section (systematic exploration)
For exploratory laparotomy, document a complete systematic survey:
Structure
Finding
AIS Grade
Diaphragm (bilateral)
Intact / laceration with location
โ
Liver
Intact / laceration grade (AAST grading)
โ
Spleen
Intact / laceration grade (AAST grading)
โ
Stomach
Intact / perforation location
โ
Duodenum (Kocher maneuver)
Intact / injury
โ
Small bowel (run entire length)
Intact / perforation / mesenteric injury
โ
Colon (entire length)
Intact / perforation / devascularization
โ
Rectum
Intact / injury
โ
Kidneys (bilateral)
Intact / contusion / laceration
โ
Bladder
Intact / rupture (intra vs. extraperitoneal)
โ
Major vessels (aorta, IVC, iliac, mesenteric)
Intact / injury with type
โ
Pelvis / retroperitoneum
Hematoma (zone I, II, or III) / expanding vs. stable
โ
Document negative findings explicitly ("spleen was inspected and found intact") to confirm the survey was complete.
AAST Organ Injury Scale
Document organ injuries using the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST) grading:
Organ
Grade I
Grade II
Grade III
Grade IV
Grade V
Liver
Subcapsular hematoma <10% SA, laceration <1cm depth
Hematoma 10-50% SA, laceration 1-3 cm depth
Hematoma >50% SA, laceration >3 cm depth
Parenchymal disruption 25-75% of lobe
Parenchymal disruption >75% of lobe, juxtahepatic venous injury
Spleen
Subcapsular hematoma <10% SA, laceration <1 cm depth
Pack count documented at each phase (placed and removed)
MTP documented with product totals and ratios
TXA administration documented (timing relative to injury)
Resuscitation endpoints documented between DCS phases
Trauma registry data elements completed
ACS-COT PI filters screened and flagged cases identified
Guidelines
Document the decision to operate and the hemodynamic rationale โ "taken to OR because of instability despite resuscitation" is legally stronger than "taken to OR for exploratory laparotomy."
Always document a complete systematic exploration, including negative findings. Failure to document examination of a structure may be interpreted as failure to examine it at all.
Use AAST organ injury grading for all solid and hollow viscus injuries โ this is the standardized language for trauma registry coding and inter-institutional comparison.
For DCS, document the lethal triad parameters (temperature, pH/lactate, coagulation) at the time of the DCL decision and at each subsequent phase transition. This demonstrates the clinical rationale for staged surgery.
Count all packs placed during DCL and count all packs removed during re-exploration. Document these counts explicitly โ a retained pack is a never event.
TXA must be administered within 3 hours of injury per CRASH-2 evidence. After 3 hours, TXA may increase mortality. Document the time of injury and the time of TXA administration.
Maintain a 1:1:1 ratio (pRBC:FFP:platelets) during massive transfusion per PROPPR trial evidence. Document the actual ratio achieved and any deviations with rationale.