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Pediatric Code Blue!
6/7/07 | 60Gunner

Posted on 06/07/2007 6:15:26 AM PDT by 60Gunner

Let me say here and now, for all and sundry, that deathly sick kids just flat scare the hell out of me. They always have and they always will. I am glad we have established that. So bringing one back from the brink of death has the tendency to cause old goobers like me to pump my fist up and down and shout, "Hell yeah, woo-hoo!". And when a kid dies, it rips the heart out of the entire department and it takes weeks- sometimes months- to recover from the shock and grief. So we get pretty uptight when a sick kid comes in. And we fight like cats in a dark bag with a snake in it to keep that kid alive.

A 4-year-old little girl was brought straight back from the triage desk. I mean, right now. She was the kind of case that flat scares the hell out of a nurse. She was sitting bolt upright even as she was carried in by her dad; her nose was way up high in the air, and the air she sucked down her constricted airway was honking, goose-like, as if forced through a pinched straw. Her eyes were watery and red-rimmed, and she looked septic and scared. One look at her and the horror-movie music started. This kid was Oh-My-God sick and about to crash and burn any second.

As soon as I saw her I stormed to the Broslow (pediatric resuscitation) cart and dragged it into the room, busted the seal, whipped out the measuring tape, measured the kid, and popped open the appropriate drawer. I rifled through, found the intubation tray, and plopped it onto the Mayo stand (a stainless steel bedside table). I just knew we were going to have to drop a tube into this kid.

I then dashed to the Med room and grabbed the Rapid Sequence Intubation (RSI) medication box and rushed back into the room. By the time I made the round trip (about 30 seconds), every extremity the kid had was covered by a nurse or ER Tech. The MD (who had just started here that night) was at the patient's head. Since I could not get to the kid, I stayed with the meds. We all donned lead aprons.

Dad was in the room, holding the girl's hand and saying soothing words. We put a lead apron around him so he could stay with his little girl while we snapped a portable soft-tissue neck x-ray and did really, horribly noxious things to his baby.

Respiratory Therapy was pumping racemic epinephrine into the kid's airway as the Xray was taken. One of the nurses managed to get a line in the kid's ankle and I immediately took station there. That was my IV site now and there was no way in hell I was gonna lose it.

I cracked the RSI medication box and pulled out the Etomidate (very fast-acting knock-out drug), Succinylcholine (longer-acting knock-out drug), and Vecuronium (paralyzing drug). I calculated the doses of each medication based on the Broslow tape measurement. I drew up the meds, nodded to the MD, and stood by.

The X-ray tech brought in the film, parked it onto the wall screen, and snapped on the light. Sure enough, sticking out like a pimp in a monastery, was the thing we hoped not to see but knew we would- the "thumb sign," indicating that the girl's epiglottis was swelling and shutting off her airway.

[Cue Symphony of Oh Crap in D Minor.]

The girl seemed to be holding her own. Her work of breathing lessened for a minute or two. Then suddenly, she sat bolt upright, her eyes wide, wide open and panicked, and turned blue.

"She's hypoxic!" one of the nurses blurted. The oximeter showed the girl's oxygen saturation at 74 percent and falling like a cow off the high dive, with good signal. (We get worried if it gets below 89 percent.)

"Okay, either we drop the tube now or we cut her. Give her the Etimodate," the MD ordered. I pushed the drug into the girl's vein and said clearly, "Etomidate in at 0243." A nurse standing by the Broslow cart noted the time on the medication administration record (MAR). The girl went limp within seconds.

"Give her the 'Sucks' (succinylcholine) now." I pushed the drug and barked, "Sucks in at 0244."

At that point, the MD thrust the girl's jaw forward, inserted the laryngoscope, and said "I have a lumen. Gimme the tube!" A nurse handed an endotracheal tube to the MD, the MD inserted the tube, and the kids's oxygen saturation jumped to 100 percent within seconds. The RT slipped in and taped the tube at the teeth while another nurse began bagging the little girl.

"Vecuronium now," the MD ordered. I pushed the Vec and said calmly, "Vecuronium in at 0244." I stood back and took in what was happening. The little girl was pinking up rapidly. Gradually, everyone stood back and watched. Her vital signs stabilized. We visibly relaxed and started breathing ourselves.

Dad broke down and sobbed. The MD asked him to step out to talk. I collected the trash that I had generated and accounted for all my sharps. I noticed that my hands had started shaking (when did that start?) as I dropped the needles into the receptacle. On auto-pilot, I took the used RSI box back to the med room for Pharmacy to pick up and went to the nurses desk to sign off on the code sheet. One of the nurses who had trained me way back when I was a snot-nosed graduate RN threw her arms around me, gave me a big hug, and said "You were wonderful!"

That was my first pediatric code as a nurse.

I excused myself for a moment, stepped outside into the rain, and just lost it. I cried for just a minute or two, but what it lacked in time it made up for in intensity. I didn't feel sad- it was more of a release of tremendous tension and fear. I never did it before, and I haven't done it since.

When I returned a few minutes later, soaking wet and somewhat more composed, the girl was being prepared for transport to the regional children's hospital. The room was clean, and dad was again in the room. The primary RN was squaring away arrangements for transfer. The medics took her away, the dad thanked us and left, and we finished the remaining four hours of our shift in peace.

We got a card a couple of months later from the dad. The girl recovered completely and was doing great. I cried again. It still feels like it happened last night, although it was a long time ago.


TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: emergencynursing; ernursestories
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To: 60Gunner

Well, it wasn’t you who did it, but 25 years ago, a team did this for my minutes old son, bagging him for 6 hours while we waited for a teeny enough vent to arrive with the transport to take him to a NICU.

I thanked them then. And every day, I remember them in my prayers.

That 30 week gestational baby is 6 foot tall now and preparing to get married.


21 posted on 06/07/2007 6:40:25 AM PDT by trimom
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To: 60Gunner

Thank you for what you do. It is not an easy career. God Bless


22 posted on 06/07/2007 6:41:10 AM PDT by call meVeronica
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To: 60Gunner

Thanks for that great story. We have gotten such dreary threads lately that this was a very welcome change.


23 posted on 06/07/2007 6:41:39 AM PDT by napscoordinator (.)
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To: 60Gunner

Diagnosis?

I was a pediatric chaplain (PICU/NICU) a million years ago at MGH. We lost about 2 kids per week from Xmas to Valentine’s. That’s when I learned about crying as tension relief.


24 posted on 06/07/2007 6:42:51 AM PDT by Mad Dawg (Some of us like to think of mania as a lifestyle choice....)
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To: 60Gunner

Even just reading this gave me an adrenaline rush!
Your writing is wonderful. Thanks.


25 posted on 06/07/2007 6:45:17 AM PDT by Grammy ("Ms Pelosi is a very difficult person to embarrass." Fred Thompson, 4/11/07)
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To: Gay State Conservative
I am with you on that one. I worked at a University Hospital ER in KY as an ER Technician. We were a level 1 trauma center. Kosairs Childrens hospital was just down the road, so the youngest we ever got was 13, and that was hard enough. I thanked God every day I didn't have to do ER for kids. When my oldest daughter was one she had a febrile seizure and stopped breathing. I had to ventilate her as we drove (2 min) to the hospital. Scariest thing I ever had to go thru in my life. The docs and nurses were great as I ran in with her in my arms shouting for respiratory and an MD.

60, Thanks for the report. God bless you.

26 posted on 06/07/2007 6:46:40 AM PDT by ibheath (I liked America better when the threats to our freedom came exclusively from abroad.)
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To: 60Gunner
Wow. I'm not sure how well I'd react under those circumstances.

Thank God for those dedicated Doctors and Nurses who have to deal with this every day.
27 posted on 06/07/2007 6:49:15 AM PDT by reagan_fanatic (I'm Fred, White and Blue!)
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To: Mad Dawg
I was a pediatric chaplain (PICU/NICU) a million years ago at MGH. We lost about 2 kids per week from Xmas to Valentine’s.

I'm surprised it was only two.Although a million years ago MGH's pediatric service probably wasn't nearly as active as was those of Children's,NEMC and BCH.

28 posted on 06/07/2007 6:54:03 AM PDT by Gay State Conservative ("The meaning of peace is the absence of opposition to socialism."-Karl Marx)
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To: 60Gunner
As a father myself, I had a meltodwn while reading this paragraph....
Dad was in the room, holding the girl's hand and saying soothing words. We put a lead apron around him so he could stay with his little girl while we snapped a portable soft-tissue neck x-ray and did really, horribly noxious things to his baby.
I'll have to return later to finish reading.......
29 posted on 06/07/2007 6:54:47 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd (Global Warming is Leftist Theology - Why is it Being Taught in School?)
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To: 60Gunner

As a baby young nursing student, many years ago, the ER lost an acute epiglot...many complicating factors...

It was horrible.

When my children were young, most had croup and I overreacted every time. I still hear that child’s dying breaths.

My primary humored me, he understood the story.


30 posted on 06/07/2007 6:59:43 AM PDT by Chickensoup (.The Muzzies are hanging us with the rope we paid out to the leftists.)
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To: trimom

Tears.


31 posted on 06/07/2007 7:00:16 AM PDT by Conservativegreatgrandma
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To: 60Gunner

Thanks for the ping.

Scary but uplifting story.

Bump to YOU!


32 posted on 06/07/2007 7:00:27 AM PDT by upchuck (If you don't have borders, you won't have a nation ~ Mark Steyn)
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To: 60Gunner

God’s Blessing Upon YOU and all those that stand in the Gap


33 posted on 06/07/2007 7:02:53 AM PDT by Halgr (Once a Marine, always a Marine - Semper Fi)
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To: Responsibility2nd

Bring Kleenex. You’ll need it.

Spoiler - it turns out OK...


34 posted on 06/07/2007 7:07:39 AM PDT by null and void ("Wherever liberty has sprouted around the world, we find American blood at its roots.")
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To: Oberon
Epiglottitis

Epiglottitis is a medical emergency that may result in death if not treated quickly. The epiglottis is a flap of tissue that sits at the base of the tongue that keeps food from going into the trachea, or windpipe, during swallowing. When it gets infected and inflamed, it can obstruct, or close off, the windpipe, which may be fatal unless promptly treated.

35 posted on 06/07/2007 7:10:24 AM PDT by tioga (Fred Thompson for President.)
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To: 60Gunner

We had a case like that once when I was in high school working in the ER. Asthma. We ended up taking her to the morgue. Seven years old.


36 posted on 06/07/2007 7:15:38 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: 60Gunner

Damn, that woke me up but good.

Also, thanks to you and all your colleagues everywhere. A few weeks ago I went to the ER with an “It’s Probably Nothing” and ended up staying three days. THAT was an eye-opener.


37 posted on 06/07/2007 7:16:48 AM PDT by Slings and Arrows ("I AM A SEXY SHOELESS GOD OF WAR!!!" --http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0439.html)
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To: tioga
What idjit designed it so that the paths for food and air cross??? "Intelligent" design, my rear!

(Speaking of rears, what's up with that crack???)

38 posted on 06/07/2007 7:23:37 AM PDT by null and void ("Wherever liberty has sprouted around the world, we find American blood at its roots.")
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To: Letaka

ping


39 posted on 06/07/2007 7:24:50 AM PDT by Shimmer128 (All that truly matters in the end is that you loved.)
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To: null and void

Thankfully, it is rare.


40 posted on 06/07/2007 7:25:43 AM PDT by tioga (Fred Thompson for President.)
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