Once in a while all the years of training and practice make a difference in the blink of an eye. Once in a while the patient dying is young and otherwise healthy. Once in a while we make a good save.
First I must tell you that the patient in this post was diagnosed by the triage nurse and then my charge nurse acted right away to get her back and I merely did what I was trained to do, but boy, with a good result it sure feels good.
Betsy is 27 and she was pregnant with her first child. She was eating dinner when she had a sharp pain in her abdomen. She quickly became weak and ill and, being a hardy sort, didn't want her husband to call the ambulance. He insisted in getting her to us and he pulled up in the ambulance bay with her in the passenger's seat. She attempted to get out of the car but collapsed on the pavement. She was rolled in to the ED and my charge nurse told me that a doctor was needed in bed 11 because the patient likely had a ruptured ectopic pregnancy.
I came into the room to see a young girl slumped in the wheelchair with eyes open and looking as pale as Casper the ghost. Her systolic pressure was 60. Training took over; two large bore IVs, stat type and cross two units of packed red cells (and by the way be ready to give trauma blood in a pinch), normal saline wide open, ultrasound to the bedside, all the abdominal organs floating in fluid, page the OBGYN stat, pain relief, quick speech to the patient and her husband, quick bimanual pelvic exam, OBGYN in the room in five minutes, confirmatory trans-vaginal ultrasound at the bedside, operating room consent, labs sent, blood pressure responding to saline, get those piercings out (had to remove the labial piercing with wire cutters from the maintenance tool box), patient rolling to the OR, and one hour later she was in recovery from her ex-lap and unilateral salpingectomy and evacuation of her ruptured ectopic pregnancy. She was in the ED for ten minutes. She had two liters of blood in her abdomen and would have died if she had waited just a few minutes more.
I went to see her a few days ago and she and her hubby were sitting in their room watching Seinfeld and laughing. She looked great. She still has one functioning fallopian tube and should be able to have children. Now this is what we train for; this is Emergency Medicine (and nursing, and OBGYN). She never once asked for pain medicine God bless her.
Sunday, May 06, 2007
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Nice work, doc.
ReplyDelete(kings you)
Who was your next patient after all that?
ReplyDeleteHope for their sake it was something legit.
i have no idea who the next was, probably a toothache for three months who couldn't afford to pay the dentist. and so it goes.
ReplyDeleteI hope if I ever need to visit the ER, there is a team like yours!!
ReplyDeleteAnother great story! I think it's the cases like these that make someone like me still want to go into EM
ReplyDelete*standing ovation*
ReplyDeleteAnd that, in a nutshell, is the argument for why we do what we do. (Well, it's kinda fun to make fun of the stupid people, too...)
ReplyDeleteIsn't it amazing when we get to do what we are there to do?
ReplyDeleteA real "emergency" in the Emergency Dept. Imagine that..... Makes it all worthwhile.
ReplyDeleteI hate happy endings (other than the massage kind). And 911doc, what do you think you are, the reincarnation of Kurt Vonnegut? Plagarist.
ReplyDeletesorry, had to throw some cold water on the fucking love-fest. I think I have some anger issues to deal with... ok, props for saving a life. Of course we all die anyway (see what I did there?).
"plagarist"? how did i plagiarize? i haven't read vonnegut since high school so if i did it i must have some kind of super sub-conscious memory.
ReplyDeleteappreciate, as always, your very restrained and subtle cynicism and anger. asswipe.
read "Slaughterhouse Five"... illiterate hick.
ReplyDelete"so it goes"...
look it up.
and what do you mean "cynical"? I love people. Period.
ReplyDeleteWow - good thing you guys were on. A save like that must be a great feeling. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat story but I'm still woozy at the thought of a labial piercing being removed with wire cutters from the tool box....good thing you have steady hands.
ReplyDeletei guarantee the removal was much less painful than the insertion, and, to go ahead and take words out of ETOTHEIPI'S mouth, "that's what she said." hahaha.
ReplyDelete