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Live from Peachtree
Street
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Case
Presenter ~ Jeff Brosius, NREMT-P
Peachtree Street ~ a rough and tumble area of Atlanta
that produces a wide variety of EMS runs.
Archive
Three
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The "Help, I've fallen....I think"
note: a list of abbreviation
are available and will open in a new window.
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Howdy once again, gang. It's been a virtual madhouse in Atlanta, and
we've been getting worked every night it seems. Hardly had time to do any "girl
watching" last shift. This work thing is really cutting into my social
life. :(
Here's one that seems simple, but got a little complicated considering the
history...Have fun, and a very happy holiday season to everyone!!
NOTE: Okay Basics and
Intermediates- jump in here with the first crack at this one!
Valerie
Dispatch info: 82 year old female, ground level fall, possible leg
injury.
ALS ambulance is the only unit responding. The scene is safe, it is
approximately 1800 hours, on a mild autumn day. There is no rain, snow,
or other weather problems. Response time is 8 minutes.
Scene: Residential area, patient found lying on the sidewalk, moaning.
There are three steps to the front door of the house, and the patient is
lying at the bottom of the steps. There is a small pool of blood near the
patient's legs. Family is standing beside the patient.
Physical Exam: 82 year old female, Alert and oriented x 3 of 4, mild
confusion. Skin is pink, warm and dry.
VS: B/P - 142/94, P - 86
irregular, RR - 22 and tearful, SpO2 97% room air. HEENT: normocephalic
and nontraumatic. Ears and nose are clear.
Airway is patent, respiratory
effort easy with no signs of resp. distress. Abdomen is soft, with no
palpable mass, rigidity, or distention. The pelvis is stable, without
crepitus.
Lower extremities reveals a open fracture of the right Tibia
and Fibula, with minor venous bleeding. Upper Extremities are normal. Back
reveals a significant kyphosis (outward curve, or "hunch back,") but
otherwise normal. The patient keeps saying she feels fine, and "won't you
all please go away." Despite this, she screams in pain every time you
touch her right leg. She also screams whenever you try to examine her. At one
point, while listening to breath sounds, she swings a punch at you,
grazing your rib cage.
Medical History: Alzheimer's type dementia, Hypertension, and Acid-Reflux.
Medications: Ativan, Lisinopril, and Zantac.
Allergies: Sulfa
What ya gonna do for this poor, dear, sweet, little old lady?
Let's get it on....
Enjoy,Jeff
a
list of abbreviation
Outcome
Hello everyone. I hope you had as much fun over the holidays as I
did. Got a chance to go home and see the family, and I am quite sure I ate
way too much food, but oh well...
Let's take a second to review what happened in this case, and we'll
talk about what we should do about it.
An 82 year old female fell to the ground, causing a fracture of the
right Tibia and Fibula. Her physical exam is unremarkable except for the
open fracture.
B/P 142/94, P 86, R 22, SpO2 97% room air. She has mild dementia and hypertension.
Treatment: I splinted the leg and applied a clean gauze bandage to
control bleeding. We started an IV line (saline lock) and gave 2mg MSO4.
Moved her gently to the stretcher, and loaded into the truck. Once there, we
hooked up the EKG, just out of curiosity cause her pulse was a little
irregular,)
and it showed a Sinus Arrhythmia. (Nice thought on the A-Fib,
y'all.)
Serum Glucose checked out at 92 mg/dL. Oxygen at 2lpm via Nasal
Cannula.
Transport begun, and I repeated the MSO4 once, giving a second dose
of 2mg.
I also put a ice pack on the fracture. Rest of transport was
uneventful. B/P remained in the same range, and ther was no change is SpO2.
Falls in the elderly are common. They generally happen for a
reason.
As Larry, Bob, and others have pointed out, it can be a result of
changes in center of gravity, combined effects of poly-pharmacy, decreased
proprioception, or any of a number of things. For this young lady,
it was a poor judgement of the distance to the steps. She misplaced her
foot, lost her balance, and fell. It doesn't have to be a great deal of force
to cause fractures in the elderly, as they have brittle bones and those bones
break easily.
Thanks to everyone for their input. Have a happy new year, and I'll
see you in Y2K+1.
Best,
Jeff
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"Which-Came-First?"
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Howdy everyone. I hope you had fun with the last case. I know I did. We
had a little discussion about EKG changes, cardiac tamponade, and cardiac
ischemia.
Wanted to toss in a little plug (I hope Valerie doesn't mind!)
for the following book: 12-Lead ECG - The Art of Interpretation, by Garcia
and Holtz. This is a fantastic book on 12 leads, written by Dr. Garcia and
Neil Holtz, Paramedic (Neil is a member of this list, and a close friend.)
Check into the book at www.12leadecg.com You won't be disappointed.
Staying with the medical concept, and also considering I've hit y'all with
trauma recently, here's a good brain-scratching, which-came-first medical
call. Let's see what we can do for this guy....
Dispatch info: 50 year old male, unresponsive, and bleeding from the nose.
There is heavy rain, it is about 2230 hours, and you are in an ALS
ambulance. There is a BLS fire engine responding as well. You are three
miles from the scene, and fifteen miles from the hospital.
Scene Size-up: The apartment is on the first floor. There is no danger to
you or the firefighters. The patient is an obese black male, lying supine
on the floor. The apartment is well kept, and the family relates that the
patient was standing in the kitchen, when he suddenly fell over. There was
no witnessed seizure activity, and the family denies recent trauma.
History: Hypertension, controlled with medication. Non-insulin dependant
diabetes. Arthritis. Mild Asthma.
Medications: Lasix, Enalapril, Celebrex, and Albuterol.
Allergies: None Known.
Physical Exam: Unresponsive black male, approx 350 lbs, lying supine. He
has snoring respirations, but his airway is open and patent. Radial Pulse
present. HEENT: Normocephalic and atraumatic. Pupils equal and reactive,
looking upward. Ears clear of fluid or blood. There is blood in the right
nare. Mouth is clear of fluid or blood. No JVD. Trachea midline and
mobile. Breath sounds clear, irregular resp pattern. Abdomen soft with no
masses or rigidity. Extremities have strong pulses, and localize pain. EKG
shows sinus tachycardia at 125-130, with no ectopy or abnormality in
conduction. Serum Glucose (via accucheck) reads > 700 mg/dl (reading of
"hi" on the accucheck.) SpO2 is 88% on room air. There are no signs of
trauma, drug use, or ETOH consumption. Vital Signs: B/P 180/90, P 130, R
18-42, SpO2 88%, Glucose >700 mg/dL.
Enroute, the patient remains unresponsive, but begins to have
tonic-clonic seizure activity.
Well?
Jeff
Outcome
Hey Gang. Hope you enjoyed the head scratching that this case involved. I know a bunch of trauma-junkies on the streets, but I'll take a good medical call any day of the week.
Luckily for me, the textbooks in my picture did not fall on my head, and I don't have a head injury. Wonder when we'll get to see a current picture of Valerie?
Anyway, let's review:
We've got a 50 year old male, unresponsive, with VS: B/P 180/90, P 120's, R 18-42 and irregular, SpO2 88%, and Glucose >700 mg/dL. We've got a fair drive ahead of us, and it's raining...
Anyone worry over the decision between fluids or no fluids? What about Medications? Airway options?
Here's what I did. Y'all feel free to tell me where I went wrong if you think I was in error...
First, a nasal airway was placed, and this was tolerated well. Oxygen via non-rebreather mask at 12lpm provided, and SpO2 increased to 93-95%. We (I mean we....me, my partner, and four firefighters) picked him up, placed him on the stretcher, and loaded into the ambulance. IV line established with 18G in the left forearm. And we start driving.
I'm getting ready to hang fluids (I'll explain why in a minute...) when he began to seize. Versed 2.5 mg slow IV push did nothing. A repeat dose of Versed 2.5 mg was effective, and the seizure stopped. No change in vitals.
I get the fluids running, infusing it wide open (I gave a total of about
500mL) and just sat back, watched him, and kept re-checking vitals. The B/P and pusle rate decreased slightly (160/88 and 114) after the Versed, but he continued to breathe, and there was no changed in the SpO2. Arrived at the ER, where he was paralyzed, sedated further, and intubated. They started insulin IV, boogied over to the CT, and later did a angio. The CT was positive for a small bleed (sorry, don't know where exactly, or if it was
Sub-arachniod, Epidural, or what...) and the angio showed a mild sized Pulmonary Embolus.
So...
Hyperglycemia and the resultant hyperosmolarity can cause
hypercoagulability. What I think happened is this: His sugar went sky-high (for whatever reason.) Somewhere in his vasculature, he developed (at least) two clots. One went to his brain, one to his lungs. The brain clot caused a cerebral aneurysim, hence the head bleed, and hence the unresponsiveness and irregular breathing. The pulmonary embolus caused his hypoxia, and that hypoxia caused (due to catecholamine release) the
tachycardia. Combine that with the head bleed, and that causes the hypertension. And since they all feed upon one another, it's a pretty nasty spiral.
I went to see him about a week later, and he'd been extubated the day before, was still unfamiliar with what happened. He was in a step-down unit after four days in the ICU. He's doing better, and was discharged home after a 10 day hospital stay. He's also taking a few new medications.
Comments?
Jeff
"When
doctors start changing things around"
Take a look and see what happens when doctors start changing
things around....
History: 61 y/o Male, complains of feeling dizzy when he
stands up. No other complaints, and the dizziness goes
away when he lies down. The patient is found lying on
his bed at home, the scene is safe, and your ambulance is the
only responding unit. The patient states his doctor
recently changed the dose on one of his medications, but he
doesn't know which one.
Past History: Hypertension, left sided nephrectomy
(secondary to trauma 10 years ago.) No drug or alcohol
use.
Medications: Dilacor XR 240 mg, Tenormin 100 mg,
Aspirin, Multi-vitamins. (Pill count is accurate and
appropriate.)
Allergies: NKDA
Physical Exam: Alert and oriented white male, well
developed and well nourished. Skin pink/warm/dry.
VS: B/P 88/48, P 36, R 18, SpO2 97% room air.
HEENT: Normal, with no trauma. PERRL.
Ears/nose clear. Airway open/self patent. No JVD.
Breath sounds clear. Heart tones normal without
murmur/rub/gallop. Abdomen soft. Extremity CMS
normal except slightly weakened pulses. Serum Glucose 94
mg/dL. EKG shown
here -in
a new window
The patient requests transport to his "usual"
hospital, about 30 minutes away. Your protocols allow
full ALS interventions as needed, with Morphine and Valium as
"on-line approval" only.
What is the problem, and what is the solution?
Best,
Jeff
Outcome
(psssst- Jeffs'
New Bio)
Howdy once again, gang.
Thanks to those who gave us input on the Peachtree Case this
month. Let's review a moment, then I'll tell ya what I
did.
We have an elderly male who recently had a change in dose of
one of his medications. He complained of feeling dizzy
when he stood up, but was otherwise fairly stable. His
ECG showed a bradycardic rhythm, and his blood pressure was
slightly hypotensive.
Here's what happened:
I saw this patient, and after the basic assessment, I started
looking for rule-outs. There was no sign or history of
recent trauma, nor was there sign of internal bleeding.
While most people who are bleeding will compensate with
tachycardia, if the patient takes Beta Blockers and Calcium
Channel blockers, this tachycardia may not be present.
I doubted any narcotic involvement, as his pupils were not
constricted, he had a normal respiratory pattern, and no
altertion in mental status.
He appeared well nourished, well hydrated, and not victim of
neglect.
So...I landed on the old stand-by of polypharmacy. He
has only one kidney, remember. And since Dilacor (a.k.a.
nifedipine or Procardia) is a calcium channel blocker that is
cleared by the kidneys, I went with the odds and played it as
an accidental Ca++ Channel Blocker OD. IV access, EKG
monitoring, and oxygen via nasal cannula. A fluid bolus
of 300 mL was given, and Calcium Chloride 10% 2 mg/kg slowly
IV was also given. His heart rate improved only slightly
during transport, and his B/P also increased slightly, but by
the time I checked in the ER an hour or so later, he was in a
normal sinus rhythm at 68, with a blood pressure of 132/84.
Inotropes were deferred, his repeat 12-lead was normal, and
all cardiac enzymes were negative. Cardiology admitted
him for 23 hour observation, and reduced his Dilacor dose by
half. He has not, to the best of my knowledge, had any
adverse effects after that.
Glucagon was a good thought if the etiology had been B-Blocker
overdose (and it might have been a combination of both the
B-Blocker and Ca++ Channel Blocker.) Glucagon can
increase both the rate and strength of contraction of the
myocardium, and is generally given in 1-3 mg IVP, every 5-7
minutes to a max of 15 mg.
The use of ASA was also mentioned, and a valid thought.
ASA is cleared by the kidneys, and ASA toxicity could be an
issue, though it would not have caused bradycardia and
positional hypotension as evidenced in this case.
But still a good pick up.
So, what do you want for next month? Trauma? Cardio?
Respiratory? Medical? OB/GYN? Let me
know, and I'll try to oblige.
Best,
Jeff
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"But
it was just a fender bender.."
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Heya gang. I gotta tell ya, that vacation to
Florida and New Orleans was about the best thing I've done
for myself in a while. Spending my birthday on the
beach in Destin, FL with a rum drink in one hand and a cigar
in the the other was cool. After that, I went to New
Orleans for the EMS Expo 2001 conference. While I
generally don't like EMS-only lectures, this was pretty fun.
Dr. Norman McSwain had a great lecture on shock therapy, and
Dr. Charles Stewart had another good discussion on hand
injuries. The best part was the chance to network a
bit, meet a few folks, and get to know some people.
Only wish I could have spent more time there, but
circumstances didn't permit. Jeff
A few side notes...don't forget to:
1) send in your interesting cases for consideration (look
for the "Send in Your Case" link on the home
page.)
2) Let me and/or Valerie know what you think of the
Peachtree cases. Good or bad, we can take it.
Honestly, we value the input, as it helps us make this site
work better for you.
3) Recommend us to a friend if you see fit.
Anyway, enough babble....let's get to the meat of the issue:
Dispatch info: Male patient, difficulty breathing.
You and your partner are the ALS ambulance crew, and there
is nobody else responding. It is a fine spring day,
about 9 am, and you're just a little peeved that this call
came in, as you had just settled down with a cup of Costa
Rican coffee andthe Sunday crossword. You have a seven
minute response, and the hospital is about fifteen minutes
away.
Scene Size Up: The house is a single story building,
in fair condition. There are no loose pets or other
hazards apparent. The wife of the patient is waving
you down, and shows you to the patient.
Primary: 30-ish white male, kneeling on the floor,
coughing very forcefully, and sweating profusely.
Airway is open, respirations appear labored, radial pulse
present. Patient complains of the cough, associated
dyspnea, and pinpoint R sided sharp chest pain.
Secondary: The patient is Alert and Oriented to
person/place/time/event. His skin is slightly pale,
and sweaty. VS: 148/96, 122, 30, and 90% room
air.
HEENT: Normocephalic and atraumatic. PERRL.
Ears/Nose clear. Minimal JVD. Trachea midline
and mobile. Breath sounds grossly clear bilaterally,
but difficult to fully evaluate secondary to the cough.
Abdomen soft, with no mass or distention. Extremities
normal, with 3+ motor/neuro/sensation. No trauma
noted, though the patient's wife states he was in a car
collision about five days ago, and "bruised his
chest." EKG
reveals a normal sinus tachycardia, with no ectopy. No
significant history,only medications are Ibuprofen and
Vicodin (for the "bruised chest," and no known
allergies.
Well, what do you think, what do you do, and what more would
you like to know?
Best,
Jeff
Outcome
Guys and Gals, let me tell you about my
modem....
I can't begin to describe how much on-line life sucks when
your modem gets a jolt from a lightning storm. Here's
what happens:
First, you get these annoying "No Dial Tone"
messages. You hit on the bright idea of taking the
handset off the phone base, then clicking "connect."
This works, as the computer then realizes there is, in fact, a
dial tone. It dials, but only connects at slow speeds
(19.6 was the best I
could get.) After that, you think things are gonna be
OK, right? Oh, no, my friends. You will be
connected, but only for a short time...say about 5-7
minutes...before the modem disconnects. At this point,
you get to log
off, shut down your computer (not just re-start, but shut
down,) wait at least 30 seconds, and turn the damn thing on
again, wait for Windows to do the log-on thing, pick up the
handset, click connect, and do it all over again. For
another 5-7 minutes, until you get booted again. I swear
if I had enough string, I'd get two tin cans, string them
together, put one in Atlanta, one in Alaska, and send the
Peachtree Cases to Valerie that way. I promise you it'd
be quicker.
Today, however, I have installed my NEW modem (with surge
protector,) and I'm back....
Here's the results of the Peachtree Case....
We have a mid-30's white male with difficulty breathing.
He presents with obvious respiratory distress and a
significant cough. He was in a motor vehicle collision a
week ago. His Vital Signs are: 148/96, 122, 30, 90%.
My first thought, as was many of yours, was a pulmonary
embolis. The timing, complaint, and presenting condition
all pointed at a PE. I was frustrated that I couldn't
get a good listen to the breath sounds, as this guy was
coughing way too much, and was in no condition to take a slow
breath. Such is life sometimes. Life isn't always
good to us medics.
Here's what I did: High flow Oxygen to start. I
generally don't go straight to a non-rebreather mask, as I
like to try and get a handle on the condition first, and then
adjust oxygen levels as I think necessary. But in this
case, I just went to the high flow to buy myself a little
time. Got
the guy in the truck, hooked up the EKG while my partner stuck
an IV line (saline at a KVO rate,) and sat back to think.
Pulmonary contusion was the one other likely scenario, as was
spontaneous pneumothorax. I switched from the NRB mask
to a nebulizer with 5mL of respiratory saline. My goal
here was to calm down the cough, while keeping the SpO2 at a
reasonable level, and get the guy in a position where I could
LISTEN to the lungs, to rule out
a Pneumo vs. PE.
While transporting, the cough did diminish significantly, and
I got the chance to really listen to breath sounds. They
were equal bilaterally, and there was no sign of a
pneumothorax. Whew...one down, two to go. His
saturations stayed in the middle 90's enroute, and I handed
him over with a higher SpO2, a slower pulse, and less
respiratory distress. Stopping by the ER a few hours
later, I spoke to the nurse caring for him. After much
persuasion and a hefty dose of the ol' Jeff-man charm, I found
out that he had a spiral CT scan, showing a small right sided
pulmonary embolis, with a minor lung contusion.
So if you thought PE, you were correct. If you thought
pulmonary contusion, you were right too. He was admitted
to the ICU floor, and discharged four days later.
Till next month....
Jeff
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"Me
No Do CPR..."
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Howdy again, everyone. Welcome to the middle of summer, where things heat
up in Atlanta (literally and figuratively.) It's getting to the point of 85
degree low temps, and the natives are getting restless. To cool themselves,
the citizens of Atlanta have been known to turn toward adult beverages. Now
I don't know about you, but in my opinion, if you take 96 degree heat, 90%
humidity, alcohol, and 500,000 people, you're destined to see trouble.
Hence, we've been running calls to the "gun and knife" club on a daily
basis. All these trauma calls tend to get routine, so I went with a medical
call for this month. This case was submitted by Steve Urszenyi, Paramedic
in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Thanks a million, Steve!
Here we go:
Dispatch: Urban EMS provider, Medic/EMT crew. The call comes in from a 21
year old female (the daughter of the patient) as a male, collapsed at home,
unresponsive. You start rolling, as enroute, you get an update from the
dispatcher: The patient is now in cardiac arrest (a.k.a. VSA -- Vital Signs
Absent.) The dispatcher is attempting to provide CPR instructions, but the
daughter is refusing to comply.
Scene: You find a 61 year old male, unconscious/unresponsive, pulseless and
apnic. As you hook up the monitor, you get a bief history from the
daughter. She states the patient, who has a known history of mental
illness, stated "I'm going to kill myself with cyanide!" before going into
the bathroom and returning with a glass of milk-like fluid. The patient
drank the fluid, and promptly collapsed.
Physical Exam: 61 year old male, approx 75kg body weight, in
cardiopulmonary arrest. No obvious traumatic injuries. Airway open and
clear. EKG: Wide complex sinus bradycarida without a pulse. Serum Glucose
100 mg/dL.
History: Psychiatric disturbancesMeds: Flurazepam,
Clonazepam, Trimipramine, Terazosin, Lithium, and
Diazepam.
Allergies: NKDA.
Your partner is starting CPR, and the Fire Department has arrived, willing
to help in any way necessary.
Well, what's next?
Outcome
Howdy once again, fellow street grunts.
Things have managed to slow down to 'normal' pace in
"Hot-Lanta," and we're no longer running 350+
calls a day....down to a more tolerable 325 or so.
Kids are back in school, older kids are back to college, and
the busy nights are limited to Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
and Sunday. Heck, this past Wednesday, we only ran 7
calls in 10 hours. Felt like a vacation! A big
howdy to a few new members of the list....thanks for joining
us, and both Valerie and I hope you enjoy our little corner
of the web-world. Be sure to tell your friends about
us: The more, the merrier!
Now, let's check out the results of the current case:
Review:
61 y/o male, cardiopulmonary arrest. The patient drank
a glass of a
milky-white substance after stating "I'm going to kill
myself with cyanide."
He is pulseless, apnic, and in a PEA rhythm on the
ECG monitor. There is no noted trauma.
According to the paramedic who ran the call, this is what
happened....
***************************
On the monitor, patient is in a PEA, wide complex sinus
brad. Your partner has commenced CPR and the fire fighter
first responders have arrived as well. Your partner directs
a fire fighter to continue chest compressions while she goes
to initiate an intravenous line. As you prepare your
intubation roll you ask the daughter to bring you all the
medications that the patient takes. She returns and hands
them over to the fire captain, who writes out a list and
calls them out to you as he goes: the patient is on
Flurazepam, Clonazepam, Trimipramine, Terazosin, Lithium,
Cimetidine, and Diazepam. Patient has no known allergies to
medications and no other medical problems.
As you continue to listen you perform intubation under
direct laryngoscopy and note that the mucous membranes are
nice and pink and moist and the cords are clean and white.
You verify placement and secure your ET tube. Lung sounds
are good with equal air entry bilaterally and no
adventitious sounds. Your partner reports that she has
secured an IV line using a 16-gauge catheter and is running
1000cc normal saline TKVO. You administer 1 amp (1 mg) of
1:10000 Epinephrine IV followed shortly thereafter by 1 mg
Atropine, then run the IV wide open for a 500cc bolus.
You note that the heart rate has now slowed to 20, still a
wide-complex
sinus rhythm. As you fire in your second round of Epi and
Atropine, the
daughter hands you the drinking glass. You take it in your
gloved hand and note that it has a white, chalky substance
adhering to the sides. You place it down on the table and
instruct the police officer to secure it and guard it, due
to the danger it may present to all rescuers. You patch to
the base hospital and advise the physician that you are
working a patient in a PEA, with suspected cyanide toxicity,
but there are also multiple other meds available, including
a tricyclic antidepressant (Trimipramine). You also advise
that nobody has yet discovered the cyanide source. He curses
pensively and muses that you don't carry anything in your
drug bag for
cyanide overdoses. He orders you to give the patient 2
sprays of NTG
sublingually. Everyone looks at you weird as you carry out
his order. He
then directs you to administer 2 amps of sodium bicarb
(potential TCA
overdose), and then one more amp of epi. No change to
the heart rhythm.
Patient is pronounced via the patch line 3 minutes later.
************************************************
So, everyone on the same page? Further, are you
thinking what I was
thinking when Steve first told me about this call:
"What the heck was the
NTG all about?"
Well, as one poster mentioned, the best treatment for a
cyanide exposure is 1) Amyl Nitrate, 2) Sodium Nitrate, and
3) Sodium Thiosulfate. The issue with cyanide is that
it causes damage to the red blood cells (well, not
exactly, but close enough) and will prevent oxygen from
unloading from the hemoglobin and entering the cells.
When this happens, the cells become hypoxic, and die.
As we all know, when there is cellular death, tissue death
will soon follow. If this continues, the body will die
too.
Treatment is aimed at competiting with the cyanide for the
red blood cells
and hemoglobin. Amyl Nitrate will change cyanoglobin
to methemoglobin, and (believe it or not,) this is easier to
deal with. Sodium Nitrate and Sodium Thiosulfate are
both agents that attract the cyanide, causing it to release
from the hemoglobin, and thereby making your job easier
(well, easier is relative, I suppose.)
So, why the SL Nitroglycerine? Well, it IS a nitrate,
and often it is the
only thing close to the specific nitrate antidotes mentioned
above. Since
this guy was dead before he hit the ground, it is one of
those "last ditch
efforts" we are sometimes forced into. It didn't
help in this case, but
then too, it certainly didn't hurt.
An uphill battle, to say the least.
On a side note: When I took the NREMTP test (a few
years ago....don't ask how many...) one question was
"Your patient has accidentaly swallowed a peach
pit...what is the treatment of choice?" The
answer? Amyl Nitrate.
And again, many thanks to Steve for sending in this case....
See ya next month....
Jeff Brosius
Atlanta, GA
"If everything is coming your way,
then you're in the wrong lane."
-- Anonymous
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