Im going to jump in here and give ya'll my .02 cents. The ONLY medication I give in a suspected cardiac event or chest pain WITHOUT an IV is Aspirin. I get a set of vitals, a 12 lead EKG, and if its a chest pain I always put in 2 IV lines. I give a dose of sublingual NTG mainly as a diagnostic indicator. I say this because if the NTG shows a change in the chest pain, or a decrease in the elevation or an improvement in the 12 lead EKG, then I start an IV Nitro drip. I have the second line as a RULE because I will NOT piggy back NTG into a Normal saline line.
Why? Simple. It would be too easy for someone to decide the patient needed an IV medication (fentanyl is a good example) so you draw it up, and plug it into your IV port, and push it. Good.. now you've given your fentanyl.. AND ALL of the IV nitroglycerin thats present in the line between the patient and your Nitro piggy back.
So, always 2 lines, and always BEFORE i give nitroglycerin. If the 2 minutes it takes to put in 2 lines causes the patient to code, then I'd bet the nitro before the line vs after wouldn't have made the difference.
Id also like to point out like anything else we check, a 12 lead is a diagnostic indicator only. it is NOT the final word. Ive had patients in the past with completely not related complaints (cellulitis) and out of sheer boredom i performed a 12 lead. The EKG is screaming ***ACUTE MI SUSPECTED***
but there was, in fact, no STEMI present. The patient stated that EKG machines ALWAYS do that with her EKG.
Most paramedics would have called the STEMI or cardiac alert, and taken the patient to the ER with an "MI" because the machine says so.
The EKG is just a tool to assist in your diagnosis of the patient.
Look at your patient!!
Last friday I had a patient that called us for chest pain. She was obese, a 30 pack year history of smoking, was being treated for hypertension, hyperlipidemia, Non insulin dependant diabetes, and had a cardiac cath with stent placement one month prior. She was pale, cool, diaphoretic, nauseated with 10/10 pressure and squeezing pain in her chest. She was also mildly short of breath.
We placed her on a NRB mask, obtained a set of vital signs (slightly hypertensive and sinus tach at 110/min) and a 12 lead EKG. 12 lead showed no ST segment depression, no wide complex anything, no ectopy of any kind.
Based on her presentation, and my exam, i opted to treat her for an acute coronary syndrome/unstable angina.
I did serial 12 lead EKG's to look for anything in the way of ischemia, or infarct. Nothing
NTG sublingual helped her pain MARGINALLY but after the Nitroglycerin at 10mcg/min her pain did improve slightly. Her blood pressure hovered around 110/systolic. She also got fentanyl for additional pain management.
She was admitted, and I am waiting on final follow up.
The point to all of this? Treat your patient, NOT the monitor...and DONT administer ANY cardiac medication without at least a SINGLE IV line... including NTG. I would consider PO ASA to be the ONLY exception.
Hope this helps!