41 YOM - Traumatic Arrest - Obvious Death or Begin Resuscitation?

Shishkabob

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Those who are picking up on the cspine... Do you not apply a collar to your intubated patients?
 

DrankTheKoolaid

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I personally always collar my intubations, but i dont consider it spinal precautions. Patient would be on backboard but not secured with straps and c-collar and head would not be taped down. So though the equipment is in use, the patient would not be in full spinal precautions
 

usalsfyre

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Not often. A cuffed ET tube doesn't tend to get displaced in the unconscious patient by head movement, it gets pulled out.

Unless your patient is HIGHLY PEEP dependent, you should be disconnecting the BVM or circuit before you move.
 

SanDiegoEmt7

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While in most systems that's the case, a bullet that sounds like it fairly neatly transacted the LV is pretty much incompatible with life.

I think a pretty good case could be made for at least phoning a doc.

I agree, and a cool minded medic would definitely get the orders here. But when I read the call description I could imagine a great deal of our medics transporting because the way the protocol is written and they would be too caught up in everything to stop and think.
 

imadriver

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Not trying to get too far off subject but:

Speaking from both a medical and firearms stand point, it is extremely unlikely a contact distance gun shot of any decent cartridge wound would "bounce" off of anything in the body. The energy it carries at close distance is simply too great for a bone to divert.

- I would think so myself, but I have ran several gunshot wounds myself where the entry / exit wounds either don't match or the person must of been in some weird position. A particular one I remember running is a guy who got shot in the stomach, entry wound in the URQ, no exit wound anywhere. After a while of searching, they found the bullet still inside behind his knee. I talked to the doc a few days later and he said he still wasn't sure how it got there, but they did find a few fractures around, I think one in the lumbar, one hip, and a femur. I didn't think to ask what caliber or anything, but the entry looked only about a 22.
 

Veneficus

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Not trying to get too far off subject but:



- I would think so myself, but I have ran several gunshot wounds myself where the entry / exit wounds either don't match or the person must of been in some weird position. A particular one I remember running is a guy who got shot in the stomach, entry wound in the URQ, no exit wound anywhere. After a while of searching, they found the bullet still inside behind his knee. I talked to the doc a few days later and he said he still wasn't sure how it got there, but they did find a few fractures around, I think one in the lumbar, one hip, and a femur. I didn't think to ask what caliber or anything, but the entry looked only about a 22.

Bullet tracts are unpredictable. I have made a fool of myself more than once trying to SWAG how and why and where. (especially when sleep deprived)

But having said that, in this scenario, I agree the projectile probably caused catastrophic damage to the heart in this case as witnessed by PEA.

It is entirely possible that there was a tamponade or a hemo/pneumothorax. But the blood would have to come from somewhere and without striking either the aorta or the actual myocardium, I am not entirely sure how that much blood would be lost that fast. The intermamilary or bronchial arteries are simply not big enough.

While I think with a highly skilled provider this was a workable call, and not a workable call with anyone else, many things would have had to go right to change the outcome.
 
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NYMedic828

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Since I'm sure some people are clearly interested, the bullet was found in the abdominal cavity.

Personally, the reason for my personal diagnosis of instant death and assumption of the left ventricle being completely transacted, is because there was no blood to be found in the airway aside from the small amount of pink frothy secretion in the tube. And more so because the wound itself had absolutely zero signs of bleeding which to me would indicate an immediate cessation of blood flow upon traumatic occurrence which means the pump shut down nearly instantaneously.

And someone posted on the second page that the injuries were possibly compatible with life as a reason to work him up, the last time I checked not having a bullet driven directly through your heart is considered incompatible with life...
 

Veneficus

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Since I'm sure some people are clearly interested, the bullet was found in the abdominal cavity.

Personally, the reason for my personal diagnosis of instant death and assumption of the left ventricle being completely transacted, is because there was no blood to be found in the airway aside from the small amount of pink frothy secretion in the tube. And more so because the wound itself had absolutely zero signs of bleeding which to me would indicate an immediate cessation of blood flow upon traumatic occurrence which means the pump shut down nearly instantaneously.

And someone posted on the second page that the injuries were possibly compatible with life as a reason to work him up, the last time I checked not having a bullet driven directly through your heart is considered incompatible with life...

I posted in this thread I have personally been part of a resuscitation of somebody who had a 12 guage slug penetrate thier heart. It was the first open thoracotomy where I saw the patient actually survive. I even remember us laughing at the bedside nurse who was trying to put the transport EKG leads on the patient as we were wathing the heart beat in the open chest cavity on the way to the operating theatre.

As I stated in that post, many things went right, from early EMS arrival, to being in a level 1 trauma center in less than 10 minutes, and finally on the night when an extremely aggresive and skilled trauma surgeon was working.

Having a bullet in the abdomen after being shot in the chest is not uncommon.

Actually in one of my surgical textbooks it states specifically if there is any doubt if the bullet is in the abd or the thorax to open the abd first.

In medicine, experience and capability counts. Not all things are equal. It is not an "If:Then" statement.

Like I said, attempting to work this or any other patient, is dependant on the people and resources available. It also depends on your approach to resuscitation. If you were using an algorythm that is designed for 70% of the population who go into cardiac arrest secondary to an MI, for a patient with a bullet hole in his chest, nobody should be surprised when it doesn't work.
 
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Fish

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had this call about a week ago now and its been bugging me.

Story:

41 y/o male, found supine on ground post gunshot to left chest. Patient was working under his car when someone walked up and shot him at close range. Called in by a bystander no further info could be obtained on-scene.

When my partner and I arrived, the BLS unit had already begun CPR and c-spine.

Assessment:

-Pulseleness Apneic.
-Single GSW to left chest, roughly one inch inferior and medial to the the left nipple.
-No exit wound
-Absolutely no blood from the wound or anywhere for that matter.
-Possible non-tension hemo-pnuemothorax to left side.
-Idioventricular PEA on the monitor at a rate of <20 complexes per min.


Since CPR was already started, in the NYC 911 system, you must continue until a physician takes over either via telemetry or hospital and takes responsibility for pronouncement.

We ran it as a PEA arrest,

EJ to the left jugular, giving vasopressin followed by Q5 epi.

Tubed the patient no problem, frothy pink secretions in tube (hence hemo-pnuemo)

CPR throughout.

We gave a notification to the trauma hospital and upon arrival they took over CPR for about 3 minutes until the trauma surgeon walked in gave the "We're done here" look once he saw where the wound was and they called it.

My question is, would you have arrived on-scene and began CPR, or would you call it an obvious death and write up a pronouncement on-scene, leaving the crime-scene in tact as well.

The shirt had burn marks on it, the wound had no bleeding leading me to believe immediate cessation of blood flow. The bullet was directly in the anatomical location of the left ventricle and probably went through to the left lung.

What would you have done if you were first on-scene?

I would have phone the Doc while on scene, since CPR was in proocess.
 

RustyShackleford

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As with most responses in this thread your local protocols will most likely greatly differentiate on what you would do on scene. Our personal protocol here is if there is known or suspected destruction of, brain, heart or lung tissue incompatible with life we can pronounce there. Obviously you don't have an ultrasound in your glasses so it would be a rough call determining if the heart was damaged beyond repair from inspecting the pt, in that case we could just do a penetrating trauma termination with that PEA rhythm and no perfusion.
 

jjesusfreak01

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I have seen 1 patient salvaged with a 12g slug through the left ventrical.

The instructions from med command included: "put your finger in the hole and get here asap" (the squad was about a minute down the street from the level 1)

Upon arrival a left thoracotomy with extension was performed in the ED. With the trauma surgeon (the same one who I saw stop a carotid artery wound bleed with a foley catheter) sewing a heart flap around my finger while infusing 4 units of O negative prior to going to the OR.

You now see the problem with cookbook medicine.

I would buy the doc a beer for letting me be present for that level of badassness.
 

emtpjwc

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Where I'm at in Texas we would of worked the pt for 20 mins and if no changes on the monitor we terminate efforts. And treat as a crime scene to the cops get there.
 

beefaroni

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Dude im bls in brooklyn. You know how they are here, might as well cover your *** and txp or risk getting restricted.
 

medicjosh

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In NYC C-spine is a requirement for any penetrating trauma to the thorax. Its really annoying to be honest.

I wanted to get on the horn to pronounce but my partner said it didn't qualify for obvious death... I thought it was pretty obvious lol.

as a fellow city medic, i'm going to have to disagree. just reviewed the BLS protocol for chest trauma and c-spine. neither indicate that you must immobilize c-spine in penetrating chest trauma.
 
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