Wellstar Trauma Surgery
Trauma Surgery focuses on the treatment and care of injuries, often life-threatening, that are caused by traffic accidents, falls, sports and crush injuries, as well as other traumatic events.
Trauma Surgery at Wellstar
Trauma surgery is a surgical specialty that involves the diagnosis and treatment of a patient with traumatic injuries. Trauma surgeons are responsible for the frontline surgical care of a patient, which is often initial resuscitation and stabilization. The trauma surgeon coordinates a team of specialists who collaborate to care for the patient from his or her arrival in the trauma room to discharge from the hospital.
Our trauma surgeons are highly skilled in assessing, diagnosing, and repairing complex internal injuries that result from traumatic events, such as motor vehicle collisions, assaults, and falls. At Wellstar, our trauma surgeons rapidly employ complex procedures and operations, in either the trauma room or operating room, depending on patient need. Urgency is crucial for successful treatment, which ranges from inserting a tube to repair a collapsed lung or stopping bleeding from internal organs. Without immediate attention, a patient could be permanently injured or even die.
Patient Care and Procedures
Paramedics begin treatment prior to a patient’s arrival at the hospital, and the Wellstar team takes over once they arrive. Patients move in to one of our three trauma rooms, where resuscitation efforts continue and our team takes x-rays, draws blood and gives medication.
Wellstar Trauma Centers employ a highly trained trauma team of emergency medicine physicians, trauma surgeons, nurses, respiratory therapists and other technologists to render care to trauma patients. After fully assessing a patient’s injuries, trauma surgeons will determine the appropriate plan of care. Often times this means emergency surgery, life support to help the patient breathe and even blood transfusions. The operating room is just steps away, ready around the clock, should surgery be needed.
Once the patient’s immediate injuries stabilize, he or she moves into the Trauma/Surgical Intensive Care Unit, the Intermediate Care Unit, or one of the trauma surgical floors. Both the injured patient, and his or her family and friends, receive support from Wellstar Trauma Center’s social workers. Our social workers meet the patient as he or she arrives in the trauma room and notify family of the patient’s status. Once the family arrives at the hospital, the social worker provides emotional support and answers questions.
As the patient’s road to healing continues, which could take a few days or several weeks depending on the severity of injuries, family and friends can take part in monthly Trauma Support Groups. This group helps patients and their loved ones cope with emotional struggles while providing practical knowledge on available resources.
Wellstar Trauma Center exists as a community resource, available anytime a life-threatening injury occurs. We strive daily to carry out our mission: to deliver the highest level of injury care possible that improves the health and well-being of the individuals and families we serve.
What We Treat
When the unexpected occurs, Wellstar trauma surgeons are on the front lines with life-saving diagnoses and treatment. In the event of a potentially catastrophic incident, you want a responsive physician with the highest level of training and experience.
At Wellstar Trauma Centers, specialized trauma surgeons evaluate, diagnose, stabilize and treat patients following a potentially life-threatening traumatic injury. Partnering with clinical teams in our emergency departments and intensive care units, these skilled specialists assess and act decisively to prevent further injury or even death. Our trauma surgeons oversee the care and recovery of both adult and pediatric patients throughout their hospital stay following a vehicle accident, traumatic fall or other incidents.
Typically Treat
- Traumatic injury
- Fall
- Burn
- Gunshot
Prevent Falls at Home
Trauma and Fracture Care
Trauma and Fracture Care
Our experts are "fracture fixers " - skilled at treating all types of bone injuries. From minor falls to major car accidents, we'll take care of you at Augusta University Health.
Why Choose Us
The orthopaedic surgeons at Augusta University Health care for patients who have suffered a bone injury. Sometimes the damage is straightforward and can be treated in our clinic without surgery, while other more complex breaks may require the attention of an orthopaedic trauma surgeon.
Augusta University Medical Center has the region's only Level I (highest level) Trauma Center which means we meet or exceed national standards for treatment of patients who have been hurt in motor vehicle crashes, falls, violence, or who have sport or job-related injuries.
Expertise in pelvic and limb salvage surgery
We are the only hospital in the region with an orthopaedic trauma surgeon specially trained to handle complex pelvic and hip socket (acetabulum) surgeries as well as advanced limb-salvage techniques. Other hospitals refer their complex cases to us because they know we are able to treat them. If you were told your injuries were so severe that you needed an amputation, our physicians may be able to help!
Conditions We Treat
Our team of surgeons see many types of conditions, caring of patients with:
- Amputations
- Broken bones (arms, legs, hips, spine)
- Bone infections
- Crooked bones
- Hip socket fractures (acetabular break)
- Osteoporosis-related fractures
- Pelvic fractures
What We Do
Our orthopaedic surgeons care for any broken bone or bone issue in the body and have the expertise to perform complex surgeries including:
- Limb salvage, surgery to remove damaged or diseased bone and tissue and reconstruct a patient's limb using grafts, bone lengthening, and/or implants.
- Advanced fixation techniques, for setting broken bones.
- Hip and knee reconstruction
- Surgical preservation of the hip, for adults and adolescents with abnormal formations of the hip socket that can lead to early arthritis.
- Joint Replacement
- Limb length inequality surgery, to fix significant differences in the length of limbs and make them equal.