After a road traffic accident at 50 miles per hour, a healthy 30-year-old patient is admitted to a major trauma centre with a closed femoral shaft fracture and pulmonary contusion. Routine management in the intensive care unit is likely to include:
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: ICU care post-trauma ensures comprehensive management. A tertiary survey (head-to-toe reassessment) identifies missed injuries (e.g., fractures), routine within 24-48 hours per trauma protocols, critical with polytrauma risks like this case. Antibiotics aren't routine without infection (e.g., open fracture); pulmonary contusion alone doesn't justify them. Rising CK from muscle damage (femoral fracture) may need monitoring (rhabdomyolysis risk), but treatment (e.g., fluids) is specific, not non-specific. Early physiotherapy aids recovery, not delayed bleeding risk is minimal with closed fractures post-stabilization. Surviving Sepsis guidelines apply only with sepsis. The tertiary survey's systematic approach prevents oversight, ensuring holistic care in a high-energy trauma patient.