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You are dispatched to a nursing home for shortness of breath. Nursing staff states the 44 y.o. patient has been short of breath for an unknown period of time ("I just got on shift, I don't know.") and that her BP is 112/60. Hx of Hepatitis C, HIV, anoxic encephalopathy, and cardiopulmonary arrest. NKDA. Only HIV meds. Pt. is a full-code.
You walk into the room to find her responsive to pain, GCS 9, laying supine, cachectic, lower extremities contracted, obviously dyspneic. Airway intact, but full of thrushy/crusty junk. Breathing very fast and gasping, radial pulse rapid and very thready. Skin moist/warm. While you are placing her on O2 15Lpm via NRB, your partner assesses vital signs: P 132, R 60/gasping/retractions, BP 54/P. Further, the cardiac monitor shows a sinus tachycardia with no ectopy and her SpO2 is 84% with the supplemental oxygen.
No JVD, trachea midline, equal chest rise, major rhonchi in all lung fields. Abdomen soft/non-tender/nondistended x4 with no pulsating mass. Extremities all have thready pulses, are cool to the touch, and she is not moving any of them.
What do you do? 🙂
You walk into the room to find her responsive to pain, GCS 9, laying supine, cachectic, lower extremities contracted, obviously dyspneic. Airway intact, but full of thrushy/crusty junk. Breathing very fast and gasping, radial pulse rapid and very thready. Skin moist/warm. While you are placing her on O2 15Lpm via NRB, your partner assesses vital signs: P 132, R 60/gasping/retractions, BP 54/P. Further, the cardiac monitor shows a sinus tachycardia with no ectopy and her SpO2 is 84% with the supplemental oxygen.
No JVD, trachea midline, equal chest rise, major rhonchi in all lung fields. Abdomen soft/non-tender/nondistended x4 with no pulsating mass. Extremities all have thready pulses, are cool to the touch, and she is not moving any of them.
What do you do? 🙂