the scene must be set. a patient arrives in casualties after having been involved in a massive accident. often there would be people who passed away at the scene who bypass casualties altogether on their way to the morgue. more often than not, some of these people are related to your patient, but that is something to deal with tomorrow. today's efforts need to be completely focused on getting your patient through his ordeal alive.
in casualties everything is a blur of activity. someone is tasked with getting lines up while someone else orders the bloods needed and someone else phones ahead to get theater ready. decisions need to be made about whether intubation is immediately necessary or if it can wait until theater. sometimes there is distraught family outside. they wait expectantly at the door hoping for good news. i make a point of speaking to them if i can before theater. yes, my job is primarily to get the patient through the other side alive, but in the end we are alive so we can live and part of life is love and family. they need to feel like they are at least involved, even if on a very small minor level. also they need to have an idea that things may not turn out well before the time.
the peritoneum is opened from top to bottom in less than a second. masses of blood come pouring out in a wild torrent and abdominal swabs are shoved with little ceremony into the abdomen, starting in the upper quadrants and moving to the lower quadrants. this is a moment that can't be fully appreciated unless you have experienced it. there is shouting and a flurry of activity. any observer will be left with the clear impression that we are fighting for the patient's life. there can be no doubt.
once the swabs are all in and the worst of the blood has stopped flowing it is time to address the source. i usually pray it is the spleen because it can be removed and the problem is solved. the liver bleeders can be a lot more tricky. a massive tear of the liver can bleed copiously. it is relatively easy to control the blood supply to the liver but the venous drainage is a different beast. the liver drains via three veins directly into the inferior vena cava, the biggest baddest vein in the body. retrograde flow through a torn hepatic vein or worse an avulsion of the liver off the ivc itself may even be impossible to control.
with these sorts of injuries the amount of blood in the abdomen is so much when you push your hands into the abdomen to apply the swabs or to give direct pressure your entire arm disappears into the pool of blood way above the gloves. blood then runs down your arm on the inside of the gloves filling the gloves with blood and totally soaking your hand. your hand ends up inside a sort of latex balloon full of the life sustaining blood of your patient. at that moment you are so close to him in so many ways. his life essence is on your hands. sometimes it feels like it is slipping through your fingers and no matter what you do the inevitability of the end seems predetermined. somehow the blood on your hands feels appropriate.
often at this stage of the fight, if the anaesthetist has managed to keep up his fluid and blood administration with the blood loss he may start hinting that things are looking dismal. he may, for instance hold up yet another pint of blood from the blood bank and casually remark
"would you like me to run this through the patient first or should i just pour it out directly onto the floor?" sometimes one has to stop and acknowledge the writing on the wall.
ironically as the awareness of the unvanquished foe sets in, the humanity of it all comes flooding back in torrents that rival the previous blood flow. suddenly you wonder about the patient as a person and how futile it all seems. suddenly you wonder about your own life and that it is dependant on this flimsy body working properly and may be so easily snuffed out. suddenly you think about the expectation the family has of you saving his life, even as that life flows out of the body beneath your bloody hands. the tension i feel then far exceeds any adrenal rush i get at the dramatic opening of the abdomen and during the valiant fight for a fellow human being's life.