Friday, October 28, 2011

EMS Call: Respiratory Arrest

Dianna is back for her monthly EMS post. I'd like to pass along my congratulations to her for winning in the ACFW Genesis contest this year! This is a much sought after award and will turn the heads of editors her way. I know we will be seeing her books published in the coming years.

Today, she focuses on the aspects of a respiratory call. This will help add those factual details for your scenes.

EMS 18, respiratory distress at 1234 Greene Road, at 1234 Greene Road on TACH channel 7.

joeyvest


As we climb into our ambulance posting (parked) at our station, my partner and I radio in we’re en route to the above scene. Lights and sirens, we rush out of the garage. En route, we’re notified via our computer that the patient is a 24-year-old female and is conscious and breathing.

Once on scene, we find the scene is safe and no dispatched law enforcement. Typically a fire crew arrives on scene first (prior to us) since there are about three times more firehouses than EMS stations globally, thus they’re closer than we are. However, fire is not always dispatched along with EMS, so for this sample EMS call we’ll say fire wasn’t dispatched.

Upon our arrival at the patient’s side, my general impression of her is she’s SOB (short of breath) and in respiratory distress (dyspnea). She’s sitting in the tripod position (leaning far forward with her palms on her kneecaps) and she’s breathing shallow and fast (tachypnea). She’s not cyanotic (blue lips or fingernail beds), so she’s perfusing fine at the moment and not hypoxic (lack of efficient oxygen), but that can quickly change.

I won’t discuss everything we’d do on a respiratory call like this, but if you need clarification or further explanation for your fictional writing needs, please do not hesitate to ask me.

julezcourt
As my partner whips out a non-rebreather mask and connects it to the oxygen tank at 15 lpm (liters per minute) then slips it over her mouth and nose, I assess her breathing rate and quality and find it definitely out of range, certainly labored and not efficient to sustain life, so I assemble a BVM (Bag Valve Mask), and my partner bags her.

As I continue with my patient assessment, and notice she’s diaphoretic (cold and clammy skin) I consider assembling a nebulizer (I’d squeeze atrovent and albuterol into a tiny circular plastic cup and attach the nebulizer contraption to the NBR (non-rebreather).

I attach her to our cardiac monitor via a 12-lead (ECG patches) to interpret her heart rhythm and heart rate, and I slip a pulse-ox on her finger (pulse-ox is attached to the monitor) to obtain her blood oxygen level.

I won’t go into any detail about heart rhythms, but I’ll simply say she has a dysrhythmia, her heart rate is at 118 (tachycardia = too fast), and her SAT is 87% (blood oxygen saturation), which is too low. Via my stethoscope, I auscultate her lungs and heart. I hear normal heart sounds, but I hear rales in her lungs. We insert a line (IV).

Our patient falls unconscious, and remains unresponsive. Cyanosis (blueness) begins to appear. She still has a pulse, but she’s no longer breathing, so she’s in respiratory arrest (apnea).

Based off my assessment and what information I gained from her roommate on-scene, I believe the diagnosis is pulmonary edema (various causes that I won’t go into). As I assemble the CPAP—Continuous Positive Airway Pressure—and attach it to her face, my partner pushes (inserts into the line) vasotec and fentanyl.

We place her onto our stretcher and load her into our ambulance for transport. En route, I monitor and reassess her constantly, perform any and all interventions as necessary, and retake all vital signs very five minutes.    

Thank you in advance for reading and for your comments.

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After majoring in communications and enjoying a successful career as a travel agent, Dianna Torscher Benson left the travel industry to write novels and earn her EMS degree. An EMT and Haz-Mat Operative in Wake County, NC, Dianna loves the adrenaline rush of responding to medical emergencies and helping people in need, often in their darkest time in life. Her suspense novels about characters who are ordinary people thrown into tremendous circumstances, provide readers with a similar kind of rush. Married to her best friend, Leo, she met her husband when they walked down the aisle as a bridesmaid and groomsmen at a wedding when she was eleven and he was thirteen. They live in North Carolina with their three children. Visit her website at http://www.diannatbenson.com 

4 comments:

  1. Once on scene, we find the scene is safe and no dispatched law enforcement.

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  2. I appreciate what you do. I'd be a basket case if I had to do that. I nearly hyperventilate when my kids cough. :)

    I think it's sweet how you met your hubby and congrats on your Genesis win!

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  3. Hey all, it's me, Jordyn-- posting Dianna's comments. She was having some computer issues and she wanted to be sure you got them.

    Hi Jessica,

    Thank you for reading my post and for your sweet comment. I love being an EMT – I can’t explain it other than to say I love rushing off to help injured and ill people, and working on scene is so interesting and challenging.

    Yeah, how we met is a story that people enjoy listening to, especially our children.

    Thanks for your congrats on my Genesis win – very kind of you.

    All my best,
    Dianna



    Hi Anadrol,

    I’m thinking you had a computer glitch and meant to write more on your comment. If so and you have a question for me, just let me know.

    Thanks for reading my post and for commenting.

    ReplyDelete
  4. no it just seemed to be worded incorrectly

    ReplyDelete