This is a scenario for septic shock in my workbook.
You are dispatched to a long term care facility for an older man with a history of high fever. You arrive to find an 80-year-old man who is responsive to painful stimuli and has the following vital signs: blood pressure 80/40 mm Hg, weak radial pulse of 140 beats/min and irregular, respirations of 60 breaths/min and shallow, and pulse oximetry of 80% on 4L/min nasal cannula.
My answer:
possible septic shock. maintain airway and assist ventilations with a BVM and supplemental oxygen at a rate of 12 ventilations per minute and place in trendelenburgs position.
The books answer was the same except it said was give supplemental oxygen and said nothing about assisting ventilations. Since he was suffering from severe tachypnea at a rate of 60 and shallow I thought I should assist ventilations.
Are you not supposed to assist ventilations because he is compensating for massive vasodilaion? Or was I correct in that a BVM should be used?
You are dispatched to a long term care facility for an older man with a history of high fever. You arrive to find an 80-year-old man who is responsive to painful stimuli and has the following vital signs: blood pressure 80/40 mm Hg, weak radial pulse of 140 beats/min and irregular, respirations of 60 breaths/min and shallow, and pulse oximetry of 80% on 4L/min nasal cannula.
My answer:
possible septic shock. maintain airway and assist ventilations with a BVM and supplemental oxygen at a rate of 12 ventilations per minute and place in trendelenburgs position.
The books answer was the same except it said was give supplemental oxygen and said nothing about assisting ventilations. Since he was suffering from severe tachypnea at a rate of 60 and shallow I thought I should assist ventilations.
Are you not supposed to assist ventilations because he is compensating for massive vasodilaion? Or was I correct in that a BVM should be used?