Picked up a patient yesterday for generalized weakness. She had been in the hospital 2 weeks ago for "fluid around her heart and lungs." We were having a really hard time getting a blood pressure on her, but one of the guys finally got 90/palp. For the way she was presenting, it seemed reasonable. We moved her to the truck, and tried to get a better BP. At that point, we couldn't palp a radial pulse, but I still wasn't overly concerned about it because she just didn't seem "that sick."
While my partner was getting a line for me, I continued my assessment. I was never taught heart tones, so I don't typically listen to the heart unless something would indicate to me that I should. Since the family couldn't really tell me what her recent diagnosis was, other than "fluid around her heart and lungs," I opted to listen just in case she truly did have fluid around her heart rather than heart failure or something else entirely. I thought her heart sounded a bit muffled, and was becoming more and more concerned for her.
The entire time we were transporting her, she denied any complaints at all, except for the weakness, passing it off as not having completely recovered yet from her hospital stay.
A couple hours after we dropped her off, while at dinner, the supervisor got a phone call from the ED. Apparently, her O2 sats started dropping suddenly, she became ashen looking, and the only way they could get a blood pressure was with the doppler (and it was only 70 systolic). The family stepped out of the room, asking for the doctor because she began seizing. She had an additional seizure shortly after the first one, and then arrested.
After dinner, I went over to the ED and talked with the doc. Apparently, she had been in the hospital for heart failure, and at that time, the cardiologist told her she had a severely leaking mytral (sp?) valve and it needed to be replaced but she refused to have the surgery. (She was in her 80's.) The theory is that the valve simply failed, causing her to no longer be able to perfuse. That little voice in the back of my head was telling me that there was something very wrong, despite what the patient was telling me, and how she initially presented. I was concerned about her, but I honestly didn't think she was I'm-going-to-die-today sick. Needless to say, I was shocked!
I guess when your number is up, there's not much you can do about it.