BLS 2015 Neurological Emergencies Scenario #1

Similar documents
CBT 445 Head & Spine Thoracic Scenario 1

NOR-CAL EMS MEDICAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE RUN REVIEW, NOVEMBER 2014

Chapter 18. Objectives. Objectives 01/09/2013. Altered Mental Status, Stroke, and Headache

Chapter 32. Objectives. Objectives 01/09/2013. Spinal Column and Spinal Cord Trauma

IRECA BLS Challenge 2015 Scenario 1

EMT Advanced Initiative Program Monitoring Blood Glucose Levels

ABNORMAL STROKE EXAM FINDINGS:

Respiratory Emergencies. Chapter 11

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 11. Objectives. Objectives 01/09/2013. Baseline Vital Signs, Monitoring Devices, and History Taking

Bottom of stairway. Respond to a fall victim at. Books and papers scattered on the ground Initial Assessment: Scene Survey

Vital Signs and SAMPLE History

Shenandoah Co. Fire & Rescue. Injuries to. and Spine. December EMS Training Bill Streett Training Section Chief

B. high blood pressure. D. hearing impairment. 2. Of the following, the LEAST likely reason for an EMS unit to be called

Chapter 24 Soft Tissue Injuries Presentation Notes

NEUROLOGY REVIEW WITH CASE STUDIES. Justin Astafan, EMT-P, CIC

Emergency Medical Training Services Emergency Medical Technician Basic Program Outlines Outline Topic: ASSESSMENT Revised: 11/2013

April 2011 CE. Site code # E The Patient With Heart Failure; CPAP as an Intervention

Chapter 11 - The Primary Assessment

Chapter 34. Objectives. Objectives 01/09/2013. Chest Trauma

Baseline Vital Signs and SAMPLE History. Chapter 5

Homework Assignment Complete and Place in Binder

Overview. Baseline Vital Signs. Chapter 5. Baseline Vital Signs and SAMPLE History. Baseline Vital Signs. SAMPLE History

Pediatric. Pediatric Sick/Not Sick SICK... NOT SICK. The gift of a child. Pediatric Mike Helbock

Selective Spinal Immobilization

Chapter 31. Objectives. Objectives 01/09/2013. Head Trauma

PEPP Course: PEPP BLS Pretest

CBT/OTEP 165 SICK/NOT SICK

Emergency Care Progress Log

Chapter 32. Injuries to the Spine by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey

3. Identify the importance in the prehospital setting for the administration of nebulized bronchodilator.

Medical Emergencies. Emergency Medical Response

Pediatric Advanced Life Support

ITLS Pediatric Provider Course Basic Pre-Test

Naloxone Intranasal EMT OPTIONAL SKILL. Cell Phones and Pagers. Course Outline 09/2017

MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH OFFICE OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES Basic EMT Practical Examination Cardiac Arrest Management

CBT/OTEP 442 Stroke. Seattle-King County EMS. Print version of EMS Online Course

PERSONAL INJURY PATIENT HISTORY FORM

Introduction to Emergency Medical Care 1

OMT for the ACOFP Boards: A Review of Clinical and Basic Information

Patient Assessment From Brady s First Responder (8th Edition) 83 Questions

Tony L Smith DNP RN ACNP CCRN CFRN EMT-IV Vanderbilt LifeFlight

CBT 435 Abdominal Pain 1

Chapter 11: Respiratory Emergencies

Be courteous to your classmates! Please set your cell phones and/or pagers to silent or turn them off.

Injuries to the Head and Spine

A guide to writing clear, concise EMS reports using SIREN

Trauma Life Support Pre-Hospital (TLS-P) Preparatory Materials

Past Surgical History

Blood Glucose Measuring Devices in the Pre-Hospital Setting

Chapter 21 - Diabetic_Emergencies_and_Altered_Me ntal_status

PRE-HOSPITAL PATIENT CARE PROTOCOLS BASIC LIFE SUPPORT/ADVANCED LIFE SUPPORT

Chapter 12. Medical Overview

NEW PATIENT QUESTIONNAIRE Spine pt acct #

Workers. 28/06/2016 Version number: v0

When do you have to write a PCR?

Hypotension / Shock. Adult Medical Section Protocols. Protocol 30

EMS Stroke Care in the Fox Valley

ASSIGNMENT OF BENEFITS

Heritage Chiropractic Clinic Geoffrey A. Sandels, D.C Lenora Church Road / Snellville, Georgia / Welcome to our office!

Pediatric Trauma Cases

911 Dispatch initiated! Stroke Assessment-!! Decreasing time to treatment at Stroke Centers

EMT OPTIONAL SKILL. Cell Phones and Pagers. Epinephrine Auto-injector. Course Outline 9/2017

A Nor-Cal EMS Webcast Nor-Cal EMS Medical Advisory Committee Run Review July Northern California EMS, Inc. All Rights Reserved Worldwide.

PERSONAL HISTORY AUTO ACCIDENT QUESTIONNAIRE. Personal Injury Questionnaire. Name Date. Date of Accident: Time. Location of Accident (Streets)

Topic: Baseline Vitals and Sample History Company Drill

Altered Mental Status. Feb, 2013 Review Training. 2 CME Credits

Neurological Emergencies. Aaron J. Katz, AEMT-P, CIC

Basic Assessment and Treatment of Trauma

EMS Report Writing. Principles and Elements of Quality PCR Reports. David Ghilarducci MD FACEP

Restore adequate respiratory and circulatory conditions. Reduce pain

Patient Re-Examination Form

Airway and Ventilation. Emergency Medical Response

QI. Read the following questions and choose the most correct answer (20 Marks):

Patient Assessment. Chapter 8

10/15/2015. Structural Lesions Brain tumor (neoplasm) Degenerative disease Intracranial hemorrhage Parasites Trauma

10O SPLINTING OF INJURIES ADULT & PEDIATRIC. 10Oa: Axial/Spine with Selective Spinal Motion Restriction Adult & Pediatric:

Northwest Community EMS System May 2018 CE: Summer Emergencies Credit Questions

Pathophysiology. Central Nervous System (CNS) Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) Consists of. Consists of brain/spinal

Student Guide Module 4: Pediatric Trauma

Dear Patient: Sincerely. Julie A. Honaker, Ph.D. Director, Dizziness and Balance Disorder Laboratory

Huron Medical Sleep Center Saad S. Ahmad, MD

3/14/2014 USED TO BE SIMPLE.. TO IMMOBILIZE OR NOT TO IMMOBILIZE.THAT IS THE QUESTION THE PROBLEM OLD THINKING

Teacher Awareness: Supporting Students with Epilepsy Section 2 Audio Script

Unit 7 INJURY MANAGEMENT Review Game

MICHIGAN. Table of Contents. State Protocols. Adult Treatment Protocols

Chapter 13. Objectives. Objectives 01/09/2013. Patient Assessment

New Patient Information

ITLS Pediatric Provider Course Advanced Pre-Test

Focused History and Physical Examination of the

Southeastern Rehabilitation Medicine Initial (New) Outpatient Information Questionnaire

R. John Brewer EMT-P Dental Education Inc. PATIENT ASSESSMENT

Chapter 8 Trauma Patient Assessment The Patient Assessment Process The Primary Assessment ABCDE s Airway, Breathing, Circulation while securing

Sleep History Questionnaire

BRAIN STEM CASE HISTORIES CASE HISTORY VII

BOTHELL INTEGRATED HEALTH, LLC Therapeutic Massage

Diabetic Emergencies and Altered Mental States From Bradys Emergency Care 10 th Edition

Frontline First Aid First Aid - What to Look For and What to Do

Medical Advisory Committee. Run Review

Transcription:

BLS 2015 Neurological Emergencies Scenario #1 Dispatch: MVA, 67 year old male rear ended another car while travelling at about 30MPH. Potential injury or illness (en route): Teaching points: Stroke Diabetic Cardiac Neck and spine Drugs or Alcohol 1. Proper BSI, scene safety. 2. Determine SICK/NOT SICK 3. Request ALS/additional resources if needed. 4. Administer appropriate oxygen when indicated. 5. Do we need to back board this patient? 6. CVA protocol 7. FAST exam 8. Place patient(s) in position of comfort. 9. Obtain appropriate history. 10. Complete and thorough clinical documentation. 11. Call Hospital code CVA Subjective: 67 year old male, MVA find patient sitting in car air bags deployed some front end damage. Patient is complaining of a severe headache. He is slurring his words and has some facial droop on one side. Information to be given by bystanders, if EMT specifically asks for it: Pt was said to be going about 30 miles and didn t even slow down. Objective: Onset: 10 minutes ago Provocation: severe headache Quality: Sharp pain at 10 Radiation: none Severity: 10/10 Time since onset: 10 minutes Signs and symptoms: Headache, slurring words, and facial droop on one side. Allergies: Dust and Pollen Medications: Proventil inhaler Previous medical history: Asthma Last food intake: 3 hours ago Events leading up to the illness: Driving Vitals: 1 st set 2 nd set LOC Skin Blood Pressure Heart Rate Respiratory Rate Pulse Oximetry Lung Sounds Pupils Blood Sugar Level GCS 13 Warm, Pink, Dry 168/90 100 20 97% 118 GCS 13 Warm, Pink, Dry 158/90 98 26 97% 110 1

Physical Exam Patient Failed FAST Exam No other injuries found Sick or Not Sick: SICK Assessment: Possible stroke Does this call require ALS (yes or no)? No Why? Plan: Keep patient head elevated. Does this patient need a backboard and c collar? Or just a c collar? Transport (yes or no): YES Transport mode: ALS or BLS Evaluator s notes: 2

BLS 2015 Neurological Emergencies #2 Dispatch: 36 year old female on a bus having some type of seizure in the aisle of the bus. Potential injury or illness (en route): Teaching points: Seizure Drugs, Alcohol Cardiac Off medications Diabetic 1. Proper BSI, scene safety. 2. Determine SICK/NOT SICK 3. Request ALS/additional resources if needed. 4. Administer appropriate oxygen when indicated. 5. Postural Vital signs when/if indicated 6. Place patient in position of comfort. 7. Glucometry 8. Obtain appropriate history. 9. Complete and thorough clinical documentation. 10. Was it drug or Alcohol induced? Subjective: 36 year old female, no prior medical history known, complaining of 3 minutes seizure, seizure stops, and patient slowly starts to regain consciousness. Information to be given by bystanders, if EMT specifically asks her for it. Not applicable. No one on the bus knows her. Objective: Onset: 8 minutes prior to 911 call Provocation: Seizure Quality: unknown Radiation: unknown Severity: unknown Time since onset: 13 minutes Signs and symptoms: unconscious Allergies: NKA Medications: Birth control pills Previous medical history: unknown later patient states first time seizure Last food intake: unknown Events leading up to the illness: patient got up to get off the bus Vitals: 1 st set 2 nd set LOC Skin Blood Pressure Heart Rate Respiratory Rate Pulse Oximetry Lung Sounds Pupils Blood Sugar Level Temperature GCS 12 Warm, Pink, Moist 120/80 100 20 Mid equal and slow to reactive 120 98.6 GCS 14 Warm, Pink, Moist 120/80 96 20 88 3

Physical Exam Patient is laying on floor of the bus, sluggish response painful stimuli, patient still in clonic phase of seizure. No other injuries except a contusion to the patients head from the hitting the bus seat during the seizure. Sick or Not Sick: NOT SICK Assessment: Seizure, unknown cause Does this call require ALS (yes or no)? No. Why? No ALS indicators. Plan: Patient exam, monitor vitals, position of comfort, transport. Transport (yes or no): YES Transport mode: BLS Evaluator s notes: 4

BLS 2015 Neurological Emergencies #3 Dispatch: 70 year old female, fall patient, headache and sudden onset of numbness on one side. Potential injury or illness (en route): Teaching points: Stroke Cardiac Drug or Alcohol Septic Diabetic 1. Proper BSI, scene safety. 2. Determine SICK/NOT SICK 3. Request ALS/additional resources if needed. 4. Administer appropriate oxygen when indicated. 5. Postural vital signs 6. Place patient in position of comfort. 7. Obtain appropriate history. 8. Complete and thorough clinical documentation. 9. FAST Exam 10. Call hospital code CVA 11. Backboard and c collar? Subjective: 70 year old female, complaining of sharp/tearing like pain that started in the middle of her head, it woke the patient up from sleep. Also numbness on one side, which made the patient fall while attempting to stand. Head pain is a 10/10. Patient is unable to stand up. Patient has medical history of a stroke 3 months ago. Information to be given by bystanders, if EMT specifically asks her for it: Spouse states that the patient was asleep in the chair and woke up and was going to the bath room when the patient fell. Objective: Onset: 15 minutes ago Provocation: None, sleeping Quality: Sharp Radiation: N/A Severity: 10/10 Time since onset: 20 minutes Signs and symptoms: sudden Allergies: NKA Medications: Atenolol, ASA, Coumadin Previous medical history: Stroke 3 months ago Last food intake: unknown Events leading up to the illness: Woken by the headache Vitals: 1 st set 2 nd set LOC Skin Blood Pressure Heart Rate Respiratory Rate Pulse Oximetry Lung Sounds Pupils Blood Sugar Level GCS 14 Pale, cool, dry 174/90 82 18 120 GCS 13 Pale, cool, dry 170/90 90 18 5

Temperature 97.5 Physical Exam Patient is lying on floor with obvious left sided deficits. Patient failed FAST Exam Sick or Not Sick: NOT SICK Assessment: Does this call require ALS (yes or no), why? No, stable vitals, no ALS indicators. Plan: FAST, Glucometry, Code CVA, rapid transport to appropriate hospital Transport (yes or no): YES Transport mode: BLS Evaluator s notes: 6