Call for an unconscious. Took all of two minutes to get to the scene.
Facts:
Guy tumbles down a flight of metal train station stairs. He's lying supine on a landing between two flights, bleeding slowly from the head, unresponsive to pain- completely out, pupils non-reactive dilated, deep snoring respirations that LOOK VERY SIMILAR (heres where I'm having trouble) to agonal respirations regularly with good chest rise but too spread out to be effective. He's slowly going cyanotic. Thing is he has a strong regular slightly fast peripheral pulse.
The respirations looked so similar to agonal respirations that when another emt truck arrived and saw me and my mates applying a c-collar, OPA, setting up the O2 and BVM and readying the backboard they shouted at us for it "why are you wasting time on that" cause they thought he was in or was going to go into cardiac arrest.
We ended up getting their help immobilizing/ loading him onto a backboard, I ended up ventilating, cyanosis gone by the time we got him movin, medics arrived on scene at the bottom of the second flight of stairs. Got him into the truck, they hooked him up to lifepak and confirmed pulse was fine, blood pressure was normal, no signs of ICP, they hooked him up to an IV, game him god knows what and nothing woke him up. I patched his head up with a couple of 5'9s while they did their thing. About 5 minutes into transport medics reassessed his breathing and decided he didn't need to be ventilated anymore.
Got him to trauma center alive, he survived the trip, i don't know what ended up happening to him.
QUESTIONS
1)AHA guidelines for CPR says you're supposed to walk up to someone, and when you see that they are completely unresponsive check for a carotid pulse, and if you don't feel one or are not sure you start compressions. Had I done that and not felt a carotid pulse or thought I didn't, or immediately judged his respiratios to be agonal, I would have been performing compressions on a guy with a good pulse and ineffective respirations who just needed rapid transport and ventilation. What are your thoughts on this.
2)Is there any way to distinguish between agonal breaths and what I saw? Did I do anything wrong? Did I waste time with the c-collar? Why do I never see anyone use c-collars when they should?
3)what do you think was wrong with him? Why would he start breathing effectively on his own after several minutes being ventilated?
What could/should I have done differently?
Facts:
Guy tumbles down a flight of metal train station stairs. He's lying supine on a landing between two flights, bleeding slowly from the head, unresponsive to pain- completely out, pupils non-reactive dilated, deep snoring respirations that LOOK VERY SIMILAR (heres where I'm having trouble) to agonal respirations regularly with good chest rise but too spread out to be effective. He's slowly going cyanotic. Thing is he has a strong regular slightly fast peripheral pulse.
The respirations looked so similar to agonal respirations that when another emt truck arrived and saw me and my mates applying a c-collar, OPA, setting up the O2 and BVM and readying the backboard they shouted at us for it "why are you wasting time on that" cause they thought he was in or was going to go into cardiac arrest.
We ended up getting their help immobilizing/ loading him onto a backboard, I ended up ventilating, cyanosis gone by the time we got him movin, medics arrived on scene at the bottom of the second flight of stairs. Got him into the truck, they hooked him up to lifepak and confirmed pulse was fine, blood pressure was normal, no signs of ICP, they hooked him up to an IV, game him god knows what and nothing woke him up. I patched his head up with a couple of 5'9s while they did their thing. About 5 minutes into transport medics reassessed his breathing and decided he didn't need to be ventilated anymore.
Got him to trauma center alive, he survived the trip, i don't know what ended up happening to him.
QUESTIONS
1)AHA guidelines for CPR says you're supposed to walk up to someone, and when you see that they are completely unresponsive check for a carotid pulse, and if you don't feel one or are not sure you start compressions. Had I done that and not felt a carotid pulse or thought I didn't, or immediately judged his respiratios to be agonal, I would have been performing compressions on a guy with a good pulse and ineffective respirations who just needed rapid transport and ventilation. What are your thoughts on this.
2)Is there any way to distinguish between agonal breaths and what I saw? Did I do anything wrong? Did I waste time with the c-collar? Why do I never see anyone use c-collars when they should?
3)what do you think was wrong with him? Why would he start breathing effectively on his own after several minutes being ventilated?
What could/should I have done differently?
Last edited by a moderator: