AnthonyTheEmt
Forum Lieutenant
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I started medic school back in september, and am currently working as an EMT. I was thinking back on a call my partner and I ran last year, and was trying to think about it from a medic standpoint about what I would have done. So here is the situation (this was the first real bad call I had run as an EMT, and kinda panicked): we get called out for a hypertension crisis. Patient is male in his mid-50's. My partner goes to talk to the nurse and find out the history on this guy. I walk into the patients room to find the guy on O2 via NC at about 2-3 LPM. Patient is unresponsive to deep painful stimuli. I take him off of the NC and immediately place him on a NRB at 15LPM (looking back on it, we probably should've started bagging him right there). I dont really recall what his lung sounds were. Here are his VS: 200/120, 135, 48, sating at about 75%. Nasty accessory muscle use, retractions, the whole shabangabang. I am thinking this guy is immediate transport. My partner walks in the room, and we consensually (sp?) that this guy needs to go now. According to the nurse, he was discharged from the hospital around 10am that day (it was about 8 or 9 at night at this point) in the exact same condition as he is now. She said "He's been like that all day". We load this guy up, and my partner gets a BP of 210/120. We get going and he is on high flow O2, and my partner says he is starting to go cyanotic, so he starts bagging him after dropping an OPA. We end up getting him to the hospital and they throw him on the monitor (dont know what the rythym was), his heart rate and BP had dropped into normal range. Never really found out what happened to him. I was thinking that as a medic, I could have hooked him up the monitor, and possibly intubated (he was deeply unresponsive, OPA was taken like a champ and airway compromise very likely). Also would have checked lung sounds. Please leave your feedback. I want to hear your take, and feel free to ask for any details that may have been left out.