Maybe Really Altered?

Bigcha40

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Pt is a 20yom that law enforcement found walking in the middle of the street in front of student dorm at around 0330.

Patient is in handcuffs standing leaning against squad car, officer relays "He is not acting right and his heart is pounding." Patient is currently awake and breathing but appears altered. He is diaphoretic, tachycardic, and is semi combative. Attempts to obtain any kind of history from him are unsuccessful.

His roommate is at scene an provides very minimal history: No past medical history, NKDA, non user of alcohol or illicit drugs.

Vitals: HR 142, Resp 22, B/P 138/72, SpO2 99% room air, D-Stick 128.
14ga IV to left AC with no response to stick, 12 lead shows sinus tach, pupils PEARL, and lung sounds clear.

While obtaining vital signs, a classmate of the patient arrives an states "They were at the pep-rally for the college earlier, that he was hypnotized by a magician and has not been acting right since then." at approximately 1500 today.

0.4mg narcan administered with no change in mental status.

Where do you go now?
 
Smell of ETOH? Vitals are stable. Maybe a few sweet shirley temples? you know COLLEGE? (that is my EMT-B opinion.)

EDIT: Increased HR might be because he is being detained.
 
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14ga IV to left AC

Really? That is beyond unnecessary and borderline assault. How can you justify anything larger than an 18ga for a medical call? If I was your medical director you would be fired.
 
Maybe because he wants to slow down his heart rate with the 14 gauge IV?

If he's altered, I would check all the possibilities of AEIOU-TIPS
 
Really? That is beyond unnecessary and
borderline assault. How can you justify anything larger than an 18ga
for a medical call? If I was your medical director you would be
fired.
Really?
Have i mentioned any treatments other than narcan?
Have i revealed my general impression?
Have i stated anything else about the call other than being on scene?
I sure am glad my medical director would give you a chance to justify treatment before he fires you.
 
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Really? That is beyond unnecessary and borderline assault. How can you justify anything larger than an 18ga for a medical call? If I was your medical director you would be fired.

Eh, I wouldn't drop a 14 but a 16 might have been in the cards. When you need lines that big you need them now and you better be good at starting them. I'd rather practice on the inebriated/altered person who wont complain/remember/feel it than grandma that fell down and muffed up her hip.

Just my opinion.

**Quoted post removed**

Everyone simmer down now. I'm interested in this case, I smell either run of the mill psych/etoh/drugs or some random zebra related to the hypnosis

What size were his pupils? Appropriate? Blown bilaterally? Pinpoint? Nystagmus?

Sounds like a stimulant with the tachycardia, tachypnea, hypertension and his presentation. Even if his friends deny drugs/ETOH remember what Dr. House would say...everyone lies.

Any recent trauma? Complaining of anything prior/post hypnosis and now? Does he feel febrile?

Roommates know of any psychiatric hx? Any chance we can get information from his dorm, some maybe even all will have information on the student which may include H/A/M or at the bare minimum an emergency contact number.

Why narcan? His SpO2 is fine and his respiratory rate is elevated, not depressed...

Hypnosis was at 1500, its now 0330 that's 12.5 hours since he was last seen normal. Does he move all of his extremities appropriately? Any notable neurological deficits? See if you can get him to walk around, how's his gait?

Roommate been sick recently? When PD found him was he just walking or was he behaving erratically? Psychosis?

My thoughts are stimulant of some sort, ETOH, psych or a real random one...CVA?
 
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Perhaps some of the marijuana analogs or other similarly engineered drugs that are always skirting the edge of the law... I have had very similar experiences with patients using those. Demographic fits...
 
Perhaps some of the marijuana analogs or other similarly engineered drugs that are always skirting the edge of the law... I have had very similar experiences with patients using those. Demographic fits...
You mean synthetic drugs like K2?
 
Interesting thread I think I'll watch it for a while.

It will stay on topic.
 
Actually if you do some extra reading narcan has been documented as reversing the effects of hypnosis. Though I doubt the op gave it for that reason. Typical my protocol for altered is narcan, so he gave it blindly not knowing the real reason to use it
 
Really?
Have i mentioned any treatments other than narcan?
Have i revealed my general impression?
Have i stated anything else about the call other than being on scene?
I sure am glad my medical director would give you a chance to justify treatment before he fires you.

I apologize if my post was harsh but this is a topic I feel strongly about. Many practitioners reach for the biggest IVs possible just because they can without any thought into the actual medical indication and necessity of the intervention. I tried looking and there is not really any good criteria out there which outlines what gauge catheter to use in what type of situation. It is left up to the discretion of the practitioner based on their assessment, patient anatomy, and type of medications anticipated to be given. But the expectation is that the practitioner will use the most appropriate for the situation. You want to use the smallest size possible that will still allow you to perform the interventions necessary. Medics start IVs but rarely see the complications (Phlebitis) from them.

Flow rates...

18G - 103 (ml/min) 10min (To infuse 1L)
16G - 236 (ml/min) 4.2min (To infuse 1L)
14G - 270 (ml/min) 3.7min (To infuse 1L)

You can argue there is a decent difference between an 18G and 16G however increase in flow by going from a 16G to a 14G really is not significant except for the most extreme situations.

How often do you give fluids faster than what an 18G is capable of?

If you would have went for a 16G I would have shook my head but kept my mouth shut. Dropping a rail road spike 14G crosses a line in my opinion and makes me think that it was used because you could not because you should have. *Not an attack on you, that is just my first reaction.

If you can justify using a 14G then I am all for it however I think that will be extremely hard to do.

Also, since I am guessing this will be a response, the fact that the patient may not have felt it or did not react to it does not make it any better.
 
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Chase, then how do you justify in your mind the introducer and dilator for a central line? Both of these are considerably more invasive than a 14ga.

I get what your saying (and have threatened decredentialing of medics if I catch them performing such shenanigans) but realistically in an altered pt with a HR of 142 I'm tagging the biggest line I can because I don't know who's going to be using it for what how far down the road.
 
14g? Wow...

Why the Narcan? His RR was 22 with a 99% RA. Would you give him D50 because his sugar was ONLY 130s?

Did you put him on the monitor before you jammed a garden hose in his arm? I'm sure there would of been another borderline reason to administer another medication into a relatively healthy college kid who's probably on drugs.

But I digress...

Now you say that he was mildly combative in handcuffs. Did you start your IV while he was cuffed? Did he stop fighting when a stranger in a uniform tried to stick a needle in his arm? This part confuses me.

Also did you draw any blood tubes before you gave any meds?
 
I apologize if my post was harsh but this is a topic I feel strongly about. Many practitioners reach for the biggest IVs possible just because they can without any thought into the actual medical indication and necessity of the intervention. I tried looking and there is not really any good criteria out there which outlines what gauge catheter to use in what type of situation. It is left up to the discretion of the practitioner based on their assessment, patient anatomy, and type of medications anticipated to be given. But the expectation is that the practitioner will use the most appropriate for the situation. You want to use the smallest size possible that will still allow you to perform the interventions necessary. Medics start IVs but rarely see the complications (Phlebitis) from them.

Flow rates...

18G - 103 (ml/min) 10min (To infuse 1L)
16G - 236 (ml/min) 4.2min (To infuse 1L)
14G - 270 (ml/min) 3.7min (To infuse 1L)

You can argue there is a decent difference between an 18G and 16G however increase in flow by going from a 16G to a 14G really is not significant except for the most extreme situations.

How often do you give fluids faster than what an 18G is capable of?

If you would have went for a 16G I would have shook my head but kept my mouth shut. Dropping a rail road spike 14G crosses a line in my opinion and makes me think that it was used because you could not because you should have. *Not an attack on you, that is just my first reaction.

If you can justify using a 14G then I am all for it however I think that will be extremely hard to do.

Also, since I am guessing this will be a response, the fact that the patient may not have felt it or did not react to it does not make it any better.

Could I just ask?

Aside from the pychological implications of actually seeing a 14 guage, do you have anything that actually says a 14g is not appropriate?

I will confess to using 14s quite frequently. Mostly because it takes a bit more skill to use a larger needle than a smaller one and like any skill, it degrades if you don't use it.

Do you think it causes significantly more pain than a 16g?

Do you think it has a higher rate of infection?

In a pseudo-scientific experiment myself and another medic once put in 18s and 14s in each other. We blindfolded each other so the "control" could not see the needle.

Final outcome was we couldn't reliably tell the difference and in one instance the 18 "hurt more."

edit: if you really want to get all up in arms about needlessly putting needles into people, could I suggest taking issue with the amount of lumbar punctures done in kids to "rule out" meningitis?
 
Chase, then how do you justify in your mind the introducer and dilator for a central line? Both of these are considerably more invasive than a 14ga.

In my mind it is a different situation since with the Seldinger technique they are usually using local anesthetic and accessing a better location than the AC. Also using the introducer/dialtor has a specific purpose and has shown to be safe and effective at reducing risks, not just for ":censored::censored::censored::censored:s and giggles". If they are getting a central line then it is safe to assume that their medical condition justifies it. I have seen many PICCs placed and they usually cause little discomfort on insertion and are well tolerated long term. Many patients prefer them as opposed to multiple large PIV.

I am all for getting access on unstable patients but I do not see any realistic need to go for a 14 over a 16 in this situation other than to "get the biggest posssible". But as Vene is arguing it is no more harmful to the patient so my argument is somewhat a mute point.

Could I just ask?

Aside from the pychological implications of actually seeing a 14 guage, do you have anything that actually says a 14g is not appropriate?

I will confess to using 14s quite frequently. Mostly because it takes a bit more skill to use a larger needle than a smaller one and like any skill, it degrades if you don't use it.

Do you think it causes significantly more pain than a 16g?

Do you think it has a higher rate of infection?

In a pseudo-scientific experiment myself and another medic once put in 18s and 14s in each other. We blindfolded each other so the "control" could not see the needle.

Final outcome was we couldn't reliably tell the difference and in one instance the 18 "hurt more."

To be honest, I can not find any actual evidenced based data supporting my opinion. So I guess in reality it is just a worthless opinion based off solely off the philosophy of use.

Pain on insertion there may be little difference (different people may have different experiences) however I would assume that larger bore catheters are more irritating to the vein and more likely to cause phlebitis. I doubt infection rate would be any different.

In the hospital I have not yet seen a 14 used. Usually when patients return from surgery they have a 16 or 18 (or 2).Per hospital policy IVs >18 must be removed within 24hrs. I am not sure the specific rationale behind the policy.
'
aside from the practice, how often do you think a 14 is truly necessary? In those situations would you have been able to effectively performed your interventions with a 16 or even an 18?
 
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aside from the practice, how often do you think a 14 is truly necessary? In those situations would you have been able to effectively performed your interventions with a 16 or even an 18?

Personally, I do not see any difference between the 16 and the 14 except the length. You can actually get the 14s that are the same length as the rest of the needles, but for logistics sake, usually the longer ones are ordered so you can decompress or start a line.

I have even seen the longer 16g for the same thing. the 18 and 20 long are becomming more popular for ultrasound guided IVs.

Some facilities will consider a peripheral 14 equally as acceptable as a central line and it is far quicker to insert. I would argue probably has less complications and infection rates too, though I have no evidence. In all of my years, in hospital and out, I have never seen a case of phlebitis from an IV insertion. I have seen some really bad necrosis from exvasiations though.

Most of my experience where anything bigger than an 18 was required was in trauma. But in the severe cases, 2 or even sometimes 3 14g needles were used. We used them so often in fact, most staff would have at least 1 sometimes 2 in their pocket. (along with a 26g for neonates)

If it was really required for antibiotics, I bet I could put the 14 in as a central line in more austere environments.

I would be equally interested if dual 14s could be used for emergent dialysis in some populations but nobody will let me try yet.

From a non-volume resuscitation point, the catheter makes a really good squirtgun on the end of a syringe for irrigating wounds. I hae also noticed on people with a lot of scar tissue, like substance abusers, the larger the needle you use, the more success there is. The bevel on a 14 is basically a blade, and it cuts the scar tissue really well without kinking the catheter.

From the standpoint of actual medical conditions, I think hypothermia is about the only reason I could think of.
 
possible postictal state hence the hypertension tachycardia and altered mental state.
 
Ok, i dont think i went into enough detail with my first post, sorry about that.

So, he was initially standing with assistance from the officer, "more leaning on the squad car to hold him up" The combative part is more of an uncooperative resisting except for trying to donkey kick the officer a few times.
While trying to secure him to the stretcher, his mental status declines further. He is now unresponsive to voice but breathing on his own. Put a NRB on him at 12LPM.
After we get him in the truck, i had the officer move handcuffs to front of body. Did a sternal rub with no response, no response to ammonia caps either. Vitals are as stated before. pupils PEARL, no no smell of ETOH, D-stick the same = 128.

So the next step was the IV, which he had absolutely no response to. Then no response with narcan.
 
Ok, i dont think i went into enough detail with my first post, sorry about that.

So, he was initially standing with assistance from the officer, "more leaning on the squad car to hold him up" The combative part is more of an uncooperative resisting except for trying to donkey kick the officer a few times.
While trying to secure him to the stretcher, his mental status declines further. He is now unresponsive to voice but breathing on his own. Put a NRB on him at 12LPM.
After we get him in the truck, i had the officer move handcuffs to front of body. Did a sternal rub with no response, no response to ammonia caps either. Vitals are as stated before. pupils PEARL, no no smell of ETOH, D-stick the same = 128.

So the next step was the IV, which he had absolutely no response to. Then no response with narcan.

So why the NRB and narcan. I see no reason(indication) for the administration of these medications.
 
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