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So you can determine that a patient is having a CVA vs BGL problem from doing the Cincinnati Stroke Scale? Mind if I as you a quick question then? Since brain cells don't work when they don't have sufficient glucose entering them and they don't work when they don't have sufficient oxygen entering them, how is it possible to determine which is which without a glucometer to tell you what the blood glucose level is?Just the opposite, a Basic would rule out stroke, e.g. with a quick Cincinnati stroke scale; since you can rule out many of the other issues and can get a good to fair educated guess that hypoglycemia is the issue than a little sugar probably wont hurt them even if it was something else. I know that there are rare issues that upping the glucose can interfere but the majority of the time, perhaps over 99% of the time this is not an issue and would be out of the scope of an EMT-B anyhow.
I agree with you and that was what I was trying to explain to Tigger is that in Pennsylvania ALL priority Pt's get high flow O2. You and I both know that the AHA says that is not the case but this is on the books for the EMT-B protocol.
Now I have noticed that in Philly the medics and up (ED staff) will listen to you if your a Basic and you have proven yourself. I don't know if this goes for other places as well?
The one big thing here is that your in CA and PA is mostly rural so their BLS protocols play the rule of averages and assume that medics are over 30 minutes away in most cases and the EMT-B has to act with a sense of urgancy. This doesn't really apply to me since I am in Philly. Pittsburgh and for a lesser degree Scranton are the same way but the remainder of this huge state is mainly utilizing a Basic EMS system using QRS and the like for its First Responders... Is Cali similar in that respect, I know that there is a lot of more city area so I would think that they have EMT-P's factored higher into their protocols in general? Tell me if this is so I am real curious to know.
You see, the Cincinnati Stroke Scale is only going to be of diagnostic value when the patient normoglycemic... so in a patient with CVA symptoms, I'm going to try to rule out the most obvious problem: blood sugar levels that are too low.
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