NYMedic828
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So we respond to a call for a stat-ep seizure.
BLS and fire are onscene 8 minutes ahead of us.
We get there they have him on O2 and say he's been seizing x15 minutes. The room was too packed for me to get in there so I let my partner handle it with the BLs and I started paperwork.
So my partner tells me she he is still seizing she is going to give 10mg of versed IM. I say ok. She gives it as I finally get over there and honestly I don't feel he was having a seizure. The patient wasn't having convulsions he was more along the lines of AMS severely agitated. He was swinging his head a bit all over lightly flailing arms and obvious hyperventilation. The other thing that made me feel he wasn't seizing was his VERY minor responsiveness to voice and full response to pain.
Patients history is only a motorcycle accident 6 years ago in which is legs were completely reconstructed and he has renal problems since. His bladder only holds 2cc of urine, so he pees in urinals all day. (he doesn't want a more permanent solution for some reason)
Normally the patient has trouble ambulatory but otherwise his mental condition is normal.
He has had emergency dialysis four times. He isn't normally on dialysis though.
His meds are only dilaudid and bicarb tablets.
Initial vitals
BP 240/110
HR 120
RR 30, deep kushmauls respirations.
3 lead, STach
BGL 195
The 10mg of versed doesn't touch em. We get an IV and med director approves 10mg of Valium. Mind you he withdraws heavily to the IV stick pain. Anyway, Valium doesn't touch him either.
The family claims the onset was relatively sudden, maybe an hour ago something seemed a bit abnormal.
Anyway, we get him to the ER, last I knew he was being intubated and sent for a CT scan.
So what would you guys presumptively diagnose here?
I was thinking along the lines of a bleed, but at the same time he has the blatant kushmauls respirations and a pretty tachy pulse maybe suggesting an acidodic condition?
I had a similar patient a couple months ago and the diagnosis ended up being acute renal failure. We originally ruled a bleed.
BLS and fire are onscene 8 minutes ahead of us.
We get there they have him on O2 and say he's been seizing x15 minutes. The room was too packed for me to get in there so I let my partner handle it with the BLs and I started paperwork.
So my partner tells me she he is still seizing she is going to give 10mg of versed IM. I say ok. She gives it as I finally get over there and honestly I don't feel he was having a seizure. The patient wasn't having convulsions he was more along the lines of AMS severely agitated. He was swinging his head a bit all over lightly flailing arms and obvious hyperventilation. The other thing that made me feel he wasn't seizing was his VERY minor responsiveness to voice and full response to pain.
Patients history is only a motorcycle accident 6 years ago in which is legs were completely reconstructed and he has renal problems since. His bladder only holds 2cc of urine, so he pees in urinals all day. (he doesn't want a more permanent solution for some reason)
Normally the patient has trouble ambulatory but otherwise his mental condition is normal.
He has had emergency dialysis four times. He isn't normally on dialysis though.
His meds are only dilaudid and bicarb tablets.
Initial vitals
BP 240/110
HR 120
RR 30, deep kushmauls respirations.
3 lead, STach
BGL 195
The 10mg of versed doesn't touch em. We get an IV and med director approves 10mg of Valium. Mind you he withdraws heavily to the IV stick pain. Anyway, Valium doesn't touch him either.
The family claims the onset was relatively sudden, maybe an hour ago something seemed a bit abnormal.
Anyway, we get him to the ER, last I knew he was being intubated and sent for a CT scan.
So what would you guys presumptively diagnose here?
I was thinking along the lines of a bleed, but at the same time he has the blatant kushmauls respirations and a pretty tachy pulse maybe suggesting an acidodic condition?
I had a similar patient a couple months ago and the diagnosis ended up being acute renal failure. We originally ruled a bleed.