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Famous Last Words
60Gunner

Posted on 01/31/2007 3:42:31 PM PST by 60Gunner

He came in at 1 in the morning, and I triaged him. His chief complaint: "Well, my chest kind of hurts, and my girlfriend made me come in." His girlfriend sat next to him, appearing fretful and unhappy. The patient was a 37 year old who appeared to be in general good health.

I was tired. It had been a long shift so far, having been spent sticking IVs into dehydrated babies suffering from GI bugs that have been particularly vicious this year. I was shipping demented elderly people to the floor at a record pace, and the nurses in MedSurg were threatening to form a lynch mob. I was 9 hours into a 12-hour shift that I worked because my opposite has decided to break his leg skiing.

But medical emergencies don't care how tired or busy I am. My triage assessment had to be thorough, and that meant that I had to elicit as much information as possible in order to find out what was really going on. I've been doing this long enough to suspect when a patient was not giving me the whole story, and I could tell that this guy was not being very candid about what was going on. Generally speaking, when a patient evades the questions it is likely that either the patient was doing something he should not have been doing, or he is in denial of an emergent problem. So we went through the sparring ritual at triage, with me probing and he evading while his girlfriend fretted on.

The training that has been pounded into my brain took over as I attempted to classify the patient's chest pain. Is this a heart attack, a pulmonary embolism, a bad gall bladder, gastroesophageal reflux, an anxiety attack, or what? I'm trying to get as much information from the guy as I can, but he is not helping.

The patient's vital signs were stable. He was not sweaty, he was not clutching his chest, and he did not appear anxious. Finally, agitated with her boyriend's evasiveness, the girlfriend could stand nor more. She interrupted him and told me: "His brother had a heart attack when he was 35, and his dad had one when he was 36."

This guy was 37.

Uh-oh.

In that instant, the lesser possibilities were automatically disqualified and I began to operate on the assumption that this patient was having a heart attack.

Now let me acquaint the reader with a big fat truth. If you have a heart attack, it may not necessarily feel like your textbook heart attack. You know, the elephant on the chest, the sweating, the horrible left-sided chest pain that radiates down the left arm and up into the left jaw. People are all unique. While that's a beautiful altruism, the fact also makes my job a lot more challenging.

I had one patient whose only symptom was a severe case of the hiccups. He was having an acute myocardial infarction (MI). I had another MI patient who simply fainted. I had yet another who had pain in both elbows. Diabetic patients often feel no pain at all (called a "silent MI"). These seemingly innocuous manifestations and vague complaints are why thorough patient assessment will always be at the top of the Challenge-O-Meter.

This is also, of course, is why ER nurses tend to jump all over a patient and stick monitor leads and IV lines in them in a hurry any time someone verbalizes symptoms that trigger our alarms- which is exactly what I did to my patient within 0.5 seconds of his girlfriend's statement.

In the Museum of Famous Last Words, three words are at the center exhibit. Here they are:

"It's probably nothing."

(Hah. I bet you thought it was "Hey, watch this." Those actually run a close second.)

And guess what the patient snapped at his girlfriend when she interjected?

"Stop it! It's probably nothing."

But with his familial history, my suspicion index was going bonkers and I was not about to be caught flatfooted if it turned out to be something. So I unceremoniously took the patient back to a cardiac room (dragging a bewildered ER Tech with me) had the patient strip out of his shirt, and slapped the blood pressure cuff, pulse oximeter, and the cardiac monitor leads on him. The patient shot his girlfriend a "see what you did?" look, but cooperated.

Now, a note on the 5-lead cardiac monitor: In terms of monitoring heart rhythm, the 5-lead monitor is great. But for diagnostics, it's like taking a picture of the Grand Canyon using the camera on your cell phone. It's informative, but not precise. So I ordered the tech to do a 12-lead.

The plot thickened.

The patient had some suspicious aberrations in his inferior-septal EKG tracings. That means that the electrical impulses that travel through the part of his heart containing the SA node (the natural pacemaker) and the AV node (which regulates the ventricular contraction) were not traveling as they should. The artery that supplies these parts of the heart may be occluded, and if that part of the heart dies, the result is a "negative patient outcome" (i.e., death). Furthermore, if that region is affected, the patient may not show classic signs of cardiac injury. Isn't that encouraging?

I know that alot of this is arcane to the reader who is not well-versed in heart attacks. Suffice it to say that I was not reassured in any way after looking at the EKG. Could it be that he was having a heart attack? Maybe. But then again, maybe not. But again the old adage applied: when in doubt, assume that the patient was having a heart attack. I was not reassured at all when I showed the MD the 12-lead, and he became immediately suspicious and got on the phone to the on-call cardiologist right now. Meanwhile, I stuck an IV into him and drew blood for more tests. I tossed 325mg of aspirin down his throat. I put him on 4 liters of oxygen.

With every minute that passed waiting for lab results, the patient became more and more impatient. And he was still not communicating his symptoms. We found out that the patient was again having chest pain only because his girlfriend came out and told us. When she did, the MD and I rushed in. I did another 12-lead EKG and as it spit out the results, the top of the page had this:

************************************* ACUTE MI **************************************

I was not reassured.

The cardiologist arrived and reviewed both EKG results with the MD, and then strode into the patient's room and informed him that he was going to be admitted to the CCU and would be going to the Cath Lab for angiography.

"Oh, no I'm not! I have to be at a meeting in the morning."

"Sir, you are having a heart attack."

"I feel fine. You don't understand- I have to be at this meeting. My business depends on it. It's not an option."

"No, sir, you don't understand." The MD countered. If we don't fix this problem right now, you will probably miss your meeting anyway because you will be dead.

The patient opened his mouth to say something to the MD, thought otherwise, and then turned on his girlfriend. "Thanks a lot! None of this would have happened if you'd have just SHUT UP!"

"I don't want you to die," she answered weakly.

"I'm not going to die! I'm FINE!" The patient turned on the ER MD. "You can't keep me here if I don't want to be here."

"That's true."

"I don't want to be here. Take this stuff off of me NOW. I'm leaving."

The girlfriend stood and declared, "If you leave you'll be walking home, because I won't drive you."

"FINE!" the patient roared. I caught the girlfriend's attention and motioned her out of the room and into the waiting area. She turned to me with tears in her eyes.

"I don't believe him! He's in total denial of this. How can he be so stupid?"

"I can't explain his attitude; but I can say that bringing him in was a wise choice on your part. Right now, the most important thing is to keep him calm. Getting angry is the worst thing he could do. How well do you know him?"

"I've been with him for a little over a year."

"Is he under any stress?"

The woman threw her arms up and said, "Oh, yeah! He works two jobs: He owns his own construction company but he's also the top loan officer for a mortgage company. He's their Golden Goose. He works constantly, and he never lets up." She paused, then added: "He has a lot riding on that meeting. Could he really die if he goes home?"

"Yes, he could."

"If he could possibly die, can't you keep him without his consent?"

"Not in this case, no."

"I have to talk him out of leaving," she concluded. I put both hands up.

"No, ma'am. Right now, we need to get him calm. Can I offer a suggestion?"

"Sure. I'm all out of ideas with him."

"Just have a seat in the waiting room for a little while. Let me get you something to drink. Getting away from the room will help both of you to calm down right now. Do you agree?"

"Yes."

I heard commotion in the treatment area, and a lot of feet. I excused myself and rushed to the patient's room to find him ashen, sweaty, and limp. His monitor showed a disorganized and slow rhythm. He was in full heart block, meaning that the connection between his SA node and AV node had been completely severed by the injury to his heart.

Oh, crap.

I joined the rest of the code team and slapped the pacer pads onto the patient, hooking it up to the defibrillator. The MD ordered sedation, which another nurse was in the process of giving. As the patient slipped out of consciousness, he slurred, "Stop it. I'm fine."

The MD looked at me and rolled his eyes. "Famous last words."

After the patient was unconscious, we managed to "capture" his heart and pace its rhythm. His vital signs began to stabilize, and we all started to breathe again. I prepared the patient for transfer to the Cath lab and gave report to the receiving nurse.

As the Cath lab team pushed the stretcher down the hall, I turned and found the girlfriend beside me.

"I'm sorry I couldn't come get you sooner," I said. "Are you going to be okay?"

She sighed. "Yeah. I'm glad it happened this way. Is that wrong?"

"Well, for what it's worth, I would rather he did it here than at home."

The woman paused and then asked: "Is it my fault that he got upset and his heart attack got worse?" She lowered her head and looked at the floor.

I turned to face her and told her, "Look at me." When she met my gaze, I continued: "Consider the possibilities. What if you had not brought him here? Upset or not, it's likely that if he was not here, he might be dead right now. So you tell me: was bringing him in worth making him upset?" "Yes," She replied. She began to cry. "He's never snapped at me before like that."

"I can't give you an answer for why he did," I said, handing her a box of Kleenex. "You know him better than I do. But I've seen alot of people who come in with heart attacks who refuse to believe it even when they can hardly breathe and the staff is swarming them. It is a frightening thing to face, and people respond to the prospect of mortality in their own ways."

I then asked, "Would you like to go to the Catheter Lab waiting room and wait for him there?"

"I'll go there. How long will it take?"

"Maybe a half hour to an hour. I'll call over so the team will be expecting you, and I'll have one of our Techs walk you over there. I have to finish charting, so I'll say goodnight now."

She extended her hand. "Thank you. You all were very good with him."

"It's our pleasure. Try to get some rest, Okay?"

"Okay."

I found an available Tech to escort the woman to the Cath Lab and turned to the arduous business of documentation so that I could run the chart over to Cath Lab quickly. As I sat down, I looked up at my watch: two hours more, and I would be off. I stretched, yawned a long and obnoxious yawn, and set to work.


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: 3words; 60gunner; emergencynursing; er; ernursing; famouslastwords; heartattack; itsprobablynothing; probablynothing; threewords
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To: 60Gunner


41 posted on 01/31/2007 5:38:37 PM PST by SwatTeam
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To: 60Gunner
A few months ago I came down with atherial filbriation of my heart.. The only symptoms I could see was lack of ability to breath well.. which got worse.. Eventually driving me to the emergence room because I could barely breath or sleep..

Thats after 2 weeks of barely sleeping because I couldn't breath.. My heart was the last thing I thought.. I thought I had the flu.. or a cold..

After one week in ICU the nurses learned me a lot about my situation.. Duuuugh.. They said I could have easily have died driving to the hospital.. As they said "Men can be Soooo dumb about health".. I would have to agree..

42 posted on 01/31/2007 5:39:39 PM PST by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole....)
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To: 60Gunner
So.....What happened to the guy!?!!?!?!
43 posted on 01/31/2007 5:40:53 PM PST by sam_paine (X .................................)
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To: 60Gunner

later


44 posted on 01/31/2007 5:41:08 PM PST by I_be_tc
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To: 60Gunner

Thanks again 60!

By the way; your "Little Misbehavior" is required reading for my twenty-something year old Airmen. Especially the young ladies!

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1733043/posts


45 posted on 01/31/2007 5:42:40 PM PST by Grizzled Bear ("Does not play well with others.")
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To: 60Gunner

Add me tyo your ping list as well.

I am married to an ol' ICU nurse.


46 posted on 01/31/2007 6:05:56 PM PST by amigatec (Carriers make wonderful diplomatic statements. Subs are for when diplomacy is over.)
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To: 60Gunner

60...well done.


Thanks.


47 posted on 01/31/2007 6:09:21 PM PST by Tainan (Talk is cheap. Silence is golden. All I got is brass...lotsa brass.)
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To: 60Gunner; pax_et_bonum
Here's the last words I always heard my ex-wife say each night at bedtime...

Dear Lord,
I pray for:
Wisdom, To understand my man.
Love, To forgive him and;
Patience, For his moods...
Because, Lord, if I pray for Strength
I'll just beat him to death!
48 posted on 01/31/2007 6:14:08 PM PST by Bender2 (Gad, Millee! 1st Lindsy goes into rehab, then you bust a gut to get my attention...)
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To: Bender2

:-)


49 posted on 01/31/2007 6:23:25 PM PST by pax_et_bonum (I will always love you, Flyer.)
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To: dighton
Personally I've always preferred General John Sedgwick's last words "They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist-".

But sometimes the patient really IS fine - I was bundled off in an ambulance from an annual physical one time because I'd neglected to tell a new doctor about a heart abnormality that turned up on an ECG. Had a stress test and an angioscope over the next couple of weeks. Clean bill of health. It was nice to learn and an interesting experience but I could have done without the drama. Best thing you can do under the circumstances is whatever the Docs say. That's always good advice unless the fellow's name is Kevorkian.

50 posted on 01/31/2007 6:28:47 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: pax_et_bonum
My sweet pax...

Music, please...

Well, I was drunk the day my Mom got outta prison.
And I went to pick her up in the rain.
But, before I could get to the station in my pickup truck
She got runned over by a damned old train.

You don't have to call me Flyer
And you don't have to call me Charlie Pride.
You don't have to call me darlin', darlin'
You never even call me, I wonder why you don't call me
Why don't you ever call me by my name.
51 posted on 01/31/2007 6:33:26 PM PST by Bender2 (Gad, Millee! 1st Lindsy goes into rehab, then you bust a gut to get my attention...)
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To: 60Gunner

"It's probably nothing."


or
my all time favorite
"Maybe it'll go away"


52 posted on 01/31/2007 6:43:17 PM PST by WKB (A wasted day is a day in which we have not laughed!)
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To: 60Gunner; dighton

Great post.


53 posted on 01/31/2007 7:15:53 PM PST by aculeus
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To: 60Gunner; Rose in RoseBear
Love reading your stories. I've been in the ER with heart-attack-like symptoms, and my wife can attest to how an ER staff jumps when someone with those symptoms comes in. I can't, because I was sort of out of it at the time.

BTW, my symptoms weren't because of a heart attack, they were being caused by gallstones, which were removed surgically the next morning.

54 posted on 01/31/2007 7:23:51 PM PST by Bear_in_RoseBear (The time grows near)
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To: 60Gunner
One night a couple years ago I suffered a mild heart attack, after showing signs of heart problems a day earlier. The problem was that I had an appointment the next morning with a cardiologist at a hospital not far away, and I figured, "Well, why not wait to see the doctor?" I called the hospital and spoke to the cardiologist on duty and he told me to call 911 and get in there. I waited an hour or so and called again. The same doctor said, "Didn't I tell you to get yourself in here?"

I did, was admitted and the next day they did the angioplasty, found that a stent would do me no good and arranged for triple by-pass surgery the next day.

Moral: when the doctor tells you to get your ass in there, do it!

55 posted on 01/31/2007 7:35:16 PM PST by OldPossum
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To: 60Gunner
Please add me to your *PING*! list :-)

Cheers!

56 posted on 01/31/2007 7:52:03 PM PST by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: 60Gunner

Please put me on your ping list.


57 posted on 01/31/2007 8:13:24 PM PST by jamaly (I evacuate early and often!)
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To: 60Gunner
Another great story. You really should consider writing a book. You have a riveting style. Please put me on your ping list if you have one.
58 posted on 01/31/2007 8:36:37 PM PST by Colorado Doug
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To: 60Gunner
My mom has severe hypothyroidism that is only now being treated. Her BP is in the red zone and, for the last few weeks, she's been having horrible pain in her chest that radiates up her throat. She gets sweaty and faint, then it passes.

She saw her doctor last week and spent half an hour telling him that she's having terrible *anxiety* issues!!!

I swear, I'm ready to duct-tape her and roll her into the ER myself.

59 posted on 01/31/2007 11:37:09 PM PST by Marie (Unintended consequences.)
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To: MarkL

LOL I've done something like that before.

Several months back I ended up driving to Nashville for a donation procedure at Vandy. I was told at the time I likely shouldn't even drive myself to the prelim appointments in Chattanooga, for the shots to prepare for it, which I shrugged off and did anyway.

Well, I was told I most definitely should have my husband drive me home from Vandy after the procedure. I nodded and smiled, knowing of course that he doesn't have a driver's license and couldn't drive my car anyway...it's a tiny car and he's so tall he literally can't fit behind the wheel.

Day of the procedure came, np, got it done and drove myself home lol. To be honest I felt pretty much fine...the shots caused a bit of body pain but I'd gotten worse from sparring in karate class many times, and a needle hole in your arm is a needle hole in your arm, be it for a standard blood donation or this...of course it's a little tender but nothing that requires any special care or worry!

The nurses had a cow when they found out at my one week followup, lol.


60 posted on 02/01/2007 2:02:31 AM PST by Fire_on_High (I am so proud of what we were...)
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