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How to Treat a Flail

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
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A flail is a broken piece of the chest wall that occurs when several ribs are broken in several different places. Treatment involves stabilizing the moving chest wall so the injured person can fill the lungs with air.

Difficulty: Easy
Instructions

    Assessment and Treatment

  1. Step 1

    Know the signs of flail chest: immediate respiratory distress; half of the chest moves in while the other moves out during breathing.

  2. Step 2

    Roll the person onto the injured side.

  3. Step 3

    Treat for shock by elevating the injured person's feet, insulating the person from the cold ground, and covering the person with a blanket or jacket.

  4. Step 4

    Place a rolled piece of clothing underneath the fractured area to support it. This will help control the pain with breathing.

  5. Step 5

    Instruct someone to maintain pressure on the injured area with one hand to keep the chest wall from moving. This hand pressure can be maintained only temporarily until something else can be rigged to maintain pressure during evacuation.

  6. Step 6

    Fill a plastic bag with sand or dirt, and hold this against the side of the flail.

  7. Step 7

    Tape a large pad of gauze across the weighted bag, bringing the tape from one side of the chest to the other. Do not tape across the back.

  8. Step 8

    Keep the person on his or her side and continually monitor for difficulty in breathing. You may need to roll the person over and provide rescue breathing if the person ceases to breathe.

  9. Evacuation

  10. Step 1

    Evacuate immediately to a hospital. The injured person must be evacuated via helicopter or carried out on a litter.

  11. Step 2

    Continue to monitor and treat for shock.

  12. Step 3

    Continually monitor the injured person's breathing. You may need to make adjustments to the bandage if it begins to restrict breathing.

Tips & Warnings
  • Do not administer narcotics such as codeine for pain. These may interfere with the injured person's ability to breathe.
  • Never wrap an adhesive bandage around the entire chest, as this will further restrict breathing. Only an elastic bandage should be used to tape the entire chest.
  • This information is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment.

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