One thing that annoys me, and also puzzles me, as of late is abnormal vital signs and the lack of appreciation we seem to have of them. We've all been there, somebody with a bit of a tachycardia and we write it off as them being a bit upset and think nothing of it.
Then they ring back an hour later in cardiac arrest.
Or somebody who is feeling a bit unwell and has a temperature of 36 degrees C and we say oh its OK its just a bit of an infection and you sometimes feel a bit hot and cold.
Then they die the next day.
Every job we gather up the numbers, write them down and give them a cursory glance and I think really that is all we do. How often do we sit down and look at them in a complete clinical picture and go ah huh ..... well I think this means that .... no we look at them and go uh huh ok thats great you can stay at home bye now because we are tired, or seen it a hundred times before, or because we get so caught up in the complex stuff we forget the basics.
Lets take some basic fundamentals of physiology you do not need to be a HEMS Registrar in an orange jumpsuit or a sword carrying Ninja House Officer to figure out ....
- A fast heart rate means increased sympathetic response due to increased demand for blood to vital organs whereas a low heart rate means poor cardiac output
- Hypothermia is often a sign of low cardiac output
- Hyperthermia is often a sign of infection
- Low blood pressure is due to low cardiac output or something like loss of vascular tone, an altered level of consciousness or something of the like
Etc, they are grossly oversimplified in some cases and not all encompssing
Why would we never leave somebody with a GCS of 13 at home but we leave people who are tachycardiac and have a fast respiratory rate at home because they are just a bit agitated and need to have a herbal tea ?
Lets look at some cases where people have missed things (these are on-published cases and not ones I have selected based off PRFs or anything like that)
- Guy had a temp of 36 degrees C, a borderline bradycardia and didnt feel well, he was left a home, he died of a massive PE
- A non English speaking elderly gent who fell 3x in the past two days (who did not normally fall) was left a home - his cause of death was unclear but it was thought to be massive haemodynamic collapse due to burst varacose veins
- A young girl who was hyperthermic, somewhat normotensive, tachypneic and tachycardic was left a home coz she had "the flu" and died of massive sepsis
- A lady who was hypoglycaemic was given some glucose and told she was OK to stay at home, I don't know what she died of but she had multiple hypo's in the past few days.
I think too often Ambulance Officers just explain away abnormal vital signs as something that is not uncommon for context and do not consider the larger clinical picture. Does that mean we should transport EVERYBODY that has a bit of a tachycardia? No not at all, but should we be leaving people at home? Maybe not it seems.
So my question is just how important are these abnormal vitals and are they truly abnormal ... eg somebody who is tachycardic and tachypneic, do they have a massive aortic ruputre or do they just have a bit of the jitters?
Why do we just gloss off the numbers and more often than not explain them away without really appreciating them? Do we appreciate the basic tennants of physiology enough or are we too quick to just come up with a reason for those numbers as being acceptable to us as Ambulance Officers?
I am particulary interested in what we think about tachycardia, because that seems to be the buzz at the moment and have seen several Ambulance clinical publications pointing out that a tachycardia should not be explained away as it were.
Apologies for my jumbled rambling, I have to be up at 4.45am tommorow which means I can't watch Greys Anatomy tonight and I don't have a DVR or TiVO
*Brown gets into his orange PJ onsie with "McBROWN" written on the back. climbs into bed and turns on the answering machine connected to the phone from Ambulance Control.
Then they ring back an hour later in cardiac arrest.
Or somebody who is feeling a bit unwell and has a temperature of 36 degrees C and we say oh its OK its just a bit of an infection and you sometimes feel a bit hot and cold.
Then they die the next day.
Every job we gather up the numbers, write them down and give them a cursory glance and I think really that is all we do. How often do we sit down and look at them in a complete clinical picture and go ah huh ..... well I think this means that .... no we look at them and go uh huh ok thats great you can stay at home bye now because we are tired, or seen it a hundred times before, or because we get so caught up in the complex stuff we forget the basics.
Lets take some basic fundamentals of physiology you do not need to be a HEMS Registrar in an orange jumpsuit or a sword carrying Ninja House Officer to figure out ....
- A fast heart rate means increased sympathetic response due to increased demand for blood to vital organs whereas a low heart rate means poor cardiac output
- Hypothermia is often a sign of low cardiac output
- Hyperthermia is often a sign of infection
- Low blood pressure is due to low cardiac output or something like loss of vascular tone, an altered level of consciousness or something of the like
Etc, they are grossly oversimplified in some cases and not all encompssing
Why would we never leave somebody with a GCS of 13 at home but we leave people who are tachycardiac and have a fast respiratory rate at home because they are just a bit agitated and need to have a herbal tea ?
Lets look at some cases where people have missed things (these are on-published cases and not ones I have selected based off PRFs or anything like that)
- Guy had a temp of 36 degrees C, a borderline bradycardia and didnt feel well, he was left a home, he died of a massive PE
- A non English speaking elderly gent who fell 3x in the past two days (who did not normally fall) was left a home - his cause of death was unclear but it was thought to be massive haemodynamic collapse due to burst varacose veins
- A young girl who was hyperthermic, somewhat normotensive, tachypneic and tachycardic was left a home coz she had "the flu" and died of massive sepsis
- A lady who was hypoglycaemic was given some glucose and told she was OK to stay at home, I don't know what she died of but she had multiple hypo's in the past few days.
I think too often Ambulance Officers just explain away abnormal vital signs as something that is not uncommon for context and do not consider the larger clinical picture. Does that mean we should transport EVERYBODY that has a bit of a tachycardia? No not at all, but should we be leaving people at home? Maybe not it seems.
So my question is just how important are these abnormal vitals and are they truly abnormal ... eg somebody who is tachycardic and tachypneic, do they have a massive aortic ruputre or do they just have a bit of the jitters?
Why do we just gloss off the numbers and more often than not explain them away without really appreciating them? Do we appreciate the basic tennants of physiology enough or are we too quick to just come up with a reason for those numbers as being acceptable to us as Ambulance Officers?
I am particulary interested in what we think about tachycardia, because that seems to be the buzz at the moment and have seen several Ambulance clinical publications pointing out that a tachycardia should not be explained away as it were.
Apologies for my jumbled rambling, I have to be up at 4.45am tommorow which means I can't watch Greys Anatomy tonight and I don't have a DVR or TiVO
*Brown gets into his orange PJ onsie with "McBROWN" written on the back. climbs into bed and turns on the answering machine connected to the phone from Ambulance Control.
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